How to set up a Cerbo GX monitoring system

by Nick Hughes · 3 months ago 408 views 24 replies
Nick Hughes
Nick Hughes
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3 months ago
#3204

Right, I'll walk you through my Cerbo GX setup since I've had one running for about two years now.

Physical Installation

Mount it somewhere central to your system — I've got mine in a weatherproof enclosure near my battery bank. Don't stick it in direct sunlight or damp areas. Leave decent airflow around it.

Network Connection

Plug in ethernet if you've got it (most reliable). If you're going WiFi, position it where signal's decent — I initially put mine too far from the router and had constant dropouts. Also grab the latest firmware before you start; saves hassle later.

System Wiring

This depends what you're connecting. For a basic setup:

  • Victron devices communicate via VE.Can or VE.Direct (I use VE.Direct for my MPPT and battery monitor)
  • The Cerbo acts as your hub, collecting data from everything
  • Cable management is worth doing properly now rather than untangling spaghetti later

Initial Configuration

Once powered up, the Cerbo creates its own WiFi hotspot initially. Connect to it and follow the setup wizard. You'll want to:

  • Set your location and timezone
  • Configure tank levels if applicable
  • Set alarm thresholds (mine alerts when battery drops below 20%)
  • Create a Victron Online portal account for remote monitoring

Display Setup

Add a GX Touch 50 display if you want physical readouts, or just use the VRM portal and Victron app on your phone. The app's genuinely useful for checking things while you're away.

The whole process takes about an hour if everything's already in place. Happy to answer specifics on your particular setup.

👍 Ewan Dixon
Paula Fisher
Paula Fisher
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3 months ago
#3205

Nice to see someone documenting this properly, @NickHughes. Two years is solid experience.

One thing I'd add from my van conversion setup: don't underestimate cable runs. I initially mounted mine too close to the battery bank and got shocking noise on the display—turns out VE.Can shielding matters more than the marketing suggests. Relocated it about 2 metres away and that sorted it.

Also worth mentioning: if you're running multiple MPPT controllers or a Multiplus, the Cerbo becomes genuinely essential for load-shifting logic. Without it you're just watching numbers. The Modbus integration is where it gets interesting for automating your setup.

What comms are you using—ethernet or just the VE.Direct dongle? That'll affect reliability depending on whether your install is temporary or permanent.

👍 🤗 Kangoo Wanderer, KIO_Sparks, Sarah
Stu
Stu
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3 months ago
#3206

Battery monitor connection is where most people trip up — make sure you're using the right shunt spec or you'll spend three months wondering why your SOC is doing laps round the Titanic. I've got a Victron SmartShunt on mine and it took me an embarrassingly long time to realise the Cerbo was reading backwards because I'd wired it with the polarity of my optimism rather than the polarity of the instructions.

Also worth noting: the GX loves a stable network connection. Stick it on 2.4GHz if you're in a narrowboat like me — 5GHz disappears faster than a cup of tea in a construction site. Makes a difference for the app responsiveness.

👍 ❤️ Ivy Callum, Ewan Dixon
JackeryNerd
JackeryNerd
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3 months ago
#3207

The Cerbo's honestly brilliant once it's wired in properly. I'd add that your Victron cables matter more than people think — cheap connections will give you dodgy readings that drive you mad troubleshooting later.

One thing @Stu1991's right about: get the shunt spec correct for your system size. I went with a 500A initially and regretted it because my solar array's grown since. If you're planning to expand, spec higher than you think you need now.

Also, don't skimp on the ethernet cable to your router if you want proper remote monitoring. Solves most connectivity issues folk moan about. The WiFi option works but it's temperamental in my garden office setup — proper wired connection's worth the effort.

What size system are you building for?

👍 BigAl, Solar Jake
QIH_Electric
QIH_Electric
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2 months ago
#3229

The shunt spec is absolutely critical — @Stu1991's spot on there. I'm running a Victron SmartShunt 500A/50mV and the difference between that and a cheap Chinese unit is night and day in terms of accuracy. The Cerbo will display whatever garbage the shunt feeds it, so don't cheap out.

One thing I'd flag that doesn't get mentioned enough: make sure your CANbus termination resistors are properly configured if you're daisy-chaining multiple Victron devices. I had intermittent comms dropouts for months until I realised my MPPT wasn't terminating correctly. The Cerbo logs these as comms errors but doesn't always make it obvious what's actually broken.

Also worth checking your firmware regularly — Victron pushes updates fairly often and some of the display/alarm improvements are genuinely useful. Mine's set to update automatically over ethernet.

😂 👍 Jackie Edwards, Brian
Relay Nomad
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2 months ago
#3250

The shunt thing really does make a difference — I learned that the hard way on my boat setup. Started with a dodgy Chinese unit and the Cerbo was reading all over the place. Swapped in a Victron SmartShunt and suddenly everything lined up properly.

One thing nobody mentions enough: cable runs between your battery bank and shunt matter. I had about 3 metres of cable and the voltage drop was throwing off my state of charge readings until I realised I needed thicker gauge than I'd used. Now running 16mm² and it's spot on.

Also worth checking your firmware's up to date before you start connecting things. Saves troubleshooting phantom issues that were already fixed in the last release.

JLB_Boats
FormerMechanic14
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2 months ago
#3255

Been running a Cerbo GX in my static caravan setup for about eighteen months now, and the thing that's genuinely made the biggest difference is the networking side that doesn't get mentioned enough.

Make sure your GX device has a solid connection to whatever you're using for comms — whether that's a 4G dongle, WiFi, or ethernet. The Cerbo will work without internet, obviously, but you lose remote monitoring entirely. I initially had mine on a dodgy WiFi extender and the lag was maddening when trying to check battery state of charge from the shepherd's hut.

Also worth noting: the default settings out of the box are quite conservative. Spend time in VRM configuring your parameters properly — battery charge/discharge limits, generator triggers, that sort of thing. The system won't self-optimise, you have to tell it what you want.

Cable routing's the other bit — keep your shunt cables separate from your AC wiring if possible. Electromagnetic interference is real and it'll throw your readings off if everything's bundled together in the same conduit.

Once it's dialled in though, it's genu

❤️ Boxer Project, Dodgy Bodger
Linda Price
Linda Price
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2 months ago
#3285

I'm running a Cerbo GX on my tiny house setup and honestly the most underrated aspect is the wiring itself. Everyone talks about the shunt (rightly so) but I've seen people install one perfectly then run dodgy cabling from the battery terminals.

Get proper marine-grade cable, don't cheap out on the connectors, and keep those battery leads as short as physically possible. I'm talking under a metre if you can manage it. Any voltage drop there and your SOC readings become fiction — mine was showing 85% when I was actually at 72%.

Also worth noting: the Cerbo's integration with Victron's other kit is seamless, but if you're mixing brands (I've got Renogy panels feeding Victron battery management) you need to be deliberate about how you're monitoring. The GX can talk to most things via Modbus but you need to set it up properly or you'll get gaps in your data.

Temperature sensors are worth the money too. My system's in an uninsulated shed, and monitoring the battery temp means I'm not guessing whether my LiFePO4 is actually safe to charge

👍 Valley Explorer
Tommo
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2 months ago
#3305

Right, adding to what @RelayNomad and @LindaPrice87 have mentioned — the shunt quality and wiring are genuinely critical, but I'd flag the networking side that often gets overlooked in these threads.

I'm running mine in my van conversion and initially struggled with inconsistent data logging until I sorted the Ethernet setup properly. If you're going wireless (which most of us do in mobile setups), invest in a decent 5GHz router rather than relying on the Cerbo's built-in Wi-Fi. The 2.4GHz band gets absolutely hammered by everything — microwaves, neighbouring caravans, you name it.

Also, don't skimp on the CAT6 cable if you're wired. I ran 10 metres to my battery bank initially with cheap stuff and got voltage drop errors that drove me mental. Switched to proper shielded cabling and the readings stabilised immediately.

One more thing — update the firmware before you integrate everything. I've seen people spend hours troubleshooting comms issues that a quick update would've sorted. The Victron portal makes it painless enough

👍 Chippy55, Col Crane
Ducato Project
Ducato Project
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2 months ago
#3312

Spot on about the wiring — I've learned that the hard way. Had my Cerbo throwing weird voltage readings for months before I realised the shunt cables were picking up interference from my inverter's DC lines running too close. Rerouted them with some proper shielded cable and it stabilised immediately.

One thing nobody mentions: the SD card. Mine corrupted after about fourteen months and took my historical data with it. Now I back the config up to my laptop monthly via the remote console. Saves you from reconfiguring everything from scratch if it fails.

Also worth noting — if you're running this in a static caravan like I am, make sure your mounting location has decent airflow. Mine gets a bit warm in summer if the door's closed all day. Keeps it away from the boiler flue though, which matters.

The VRM portal integration is where it really shines once you've got it running. Being able to check your battery state remotely without being on site is genuinely useful, especially if you're leaving the van unattended for stretches.

👍 KIO_Sparks
RetiredChef
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2 months ago
#3317

Proper crimped connections are your mate here — dodgy terminals will have your Cerbo throwing phantom alarms at 3am like a hyperactive smoke detector. I learned that the hard way on my narrowboat when a corroded battery connector made the system think I'd got a dead cell for weeks.

Also worth noting: keep your shunt leads as short and symmetrical as possible, ideally twisted together to minimise noise. The Cerbo's brilliant at what it does, but it'll faithfully report every electrical hiccup if your wiring's sloppy.

One thing I don't see mentioned yet — make sure you're using proper marine-grade tinned copper cable rated for your current draw. Decent terminals from Victron or similar aren't expensive compared to the grief of tracking down intermittent faults. On the static caravan, I went full belt and braces with heat-shrink and dielectric grease on everything, and haven't had a phantom fault since.

The system's only as smart as the data feeding into it, really.

🤗 Ewan Dixon, Ben Thomas
Relay Dream
Relay Dream
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2 months ago
#3341

Agree with @Tommo on the shunt — mine's a Victron SmartShunt and it's bulletproof, but honestly the biggest headache for me was the CANbus wiring. Got mine twisted and shielded properly now, but spent ages chasing gremlins that turned out to be EMI from the inverter.

One thing nobody mentions — keep your Cerbo away from direct sunlight if you can. I've got mine in a wooden box with ventilation and it's made a difference to the display readability in summer.

The app is genuinely brilliant once it's talking to everything. Worth spending the time getting it right first time round rather than troubleshooting later. Also make sure your GX firmware is up to date before you start — saved me from some odd syncing issues with the battery monitor.

👍 Tracy Moore, OffGrid Tina
Simon Thompson
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2 months ago
#3343

The Cerbo's honestly been a lifesaver for me — particularly useful on the boat where I need to monitor everything remotely. One thing I'd add that doesn't get mentioned enough: cable runs matter as much as the connections themselves.

I routed mine poorly at first, bundling it with high-current wiring, and got all sorts of noise on the display readings. Separated them out and it cleared up completely. Keep your data cables away from your DC distribution, basically.

Also worth noting — if you're running this for emergency backup like I am, make sure your Cerbo's on a separate circuit that won't drop if your main system goes down. Mine's fed from a dedicated battery terminal, so if the rest of the house loses power, I can still see what's happening with my reserves.

The app works brilliantly once it's connected, but don't rely on it for real-time critical stuff if you're off-grid. Local display is still your best mate when things go sideways.

FogstarFan
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2 months ago
#3367

Mounted mine in the motorhome next to the Victron battery monitor and it's been rock solid for eighteen months — just make sure your networking cable doesn't run alongside your solar strings or you'll get interference that'll make you question your entire life choices at 2am.

The real game-changer is setting up the Modbus TCP properly if you're running multiple devices; spent a weekend pulling my hair out before realising I'd just misconfigured the IP addressing like a numpty. Also worth noting the Cerbo absolutely loves a stable WiFi signal — if yours keeps dropping, you'll get constant reconnection alerts that'll drive you mental.

One tip nobody mentions: back up your configuration file regularly. Had a firmware update go sideways last year and it would've been a proper nightmare if I hadn't kept a backup on my laptop.

😂 👍 Dan Hill, Ed Stewart
Mountain Child
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2 months ago
#3370

I've had mine tucked into a small cabinet in the narrowboat's engine room for about eighteen months now, and it's transformed how I manage things whilst I'm away. The key thing nobody mentions is cable routing — run your VE.Can and VE.Direct lines separately from your power cables, otherwise you'll get noise creeping into your readings and spend weeks chasing phantom faults.

@SimonThompson, you're spot on about remote monitoring. Being able to check my battery state of charge and genset runtime from the pub is genuinely useful, especially during winter when the solar's doing bugger all.

One thing that caught me out: the Cerbo's Venus OS updates can occasionally cause the display to glitch if your SD card's marginal. I've replaced mine once already. Worth keeping a spare handy.

The real win for me was integrating it with my Victron MPPT — suddenly you've got this beautiful picture of what's actually happening with your system rather than guessing. Cost me a fair bit initially, but if you're running anything complex (multiple charge sources, loads that vary wildly), it pays for itself in avoiding silly mistakes.

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