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Ray Cullum July 27th 04 04:47 PM

Windlass Electrical Connection
 
I am considering adding a electric windlass to my boat and I would like some
opinions on the best way to connect to the electrical system.

The windlass will be approximately 40 feet from my house battery bank which is
700amps. It has been suggested to me to place a small battery up close to the
windlass so you don't have to run heavy battery cable such a distance and
sustain the power loss. Small cable could be run to the battery strictly for
recharging.

Thanks for the help.

Ray Cullum
S/V FROLIC

Bart Senior July 27th 04 05:17 PM

Windlass Electrical Connection
 
Why add the extra weight f a battery in the front where you don't want it?

I'd use heavy gauge wire and run it from the house bank.

Ray Cullum wrote

I am considering adding a electric windlass to my boat and I would like

some
opinions on the best way to connect to the electrical system.

The windlass will be approximately 40 feet from my house battery bank

which is
700amps. It has been suggested to me to place a small battery up close to

the
windlass so you don't have to run heavy battery cable such a distance and
sustain the power loss. Small cable could be run to the battery strictly

for
recharging.

Thanks for the help.

Ray Cullum
S/V FROLIC




Jeff Morris July 27th 04 05:36 PM

Windlass Electrical Connection
 
I never bought the logic, neither did my builder, who used the "long wire"
approach.

Consider, for a 80 foot round trip and an 80 Amp load, you want "2" gauge wire
for a 10% loss. Being conservative, you might go to "0" gauge. That 80 feet
weighs 35 pounds. So the result is you would put a 35 pound starting battery in
the bow instead of distributing 35 pounds along the length. And we're not
talking about all the complications of keeping an extra battery charged and
happy. The only virtue is that you now have some redundancy in a critical area.
But you also have another failure mode.

There are other issues, like how do you prevent 80 amps from going down the
charger wire if you raise the anchor when the engine is running? And if you
don't keep up with the use, how large a battery to you need to ensure you have
the juice to reset the anchor several times, the last time, of course, in the
middle of the night?



"Ray Cullum" wrote in message
...
I am considering adding a electric windlass to my boat and I would like some
opinions on the best way to connect to the electrical system.

The windlass will be approximately 40 feet from my house battery bank which is
700amps. It has been suggested to me to place a small battery up close to the
windlass so you don't have to run heavy battery cable such a distance and
sustain the power loss. Small cable could be run to the battery strictly for
recharging.

Thanks for the help.

Ray Cullum
S/V FROLIC




Marc July 27th 04 05:42 PM

Windlass Electrical Connection
 
He doesn't say, but if he's adding a windless, he's probably adding an
all chain rode and he is probably a cruiser. The added weight of a
battery forward (it doesen't have to be in the extreme pointy end) is
negligable when considered with all the other gear he is carrying.
Electrically it makes sense and he doesnt even need another output on
the charger, he can use a battery combiner. http://www.yandina.com/
Also, if the battery would be 40' from a 700 amp battery bank, I
suggest he's got a big enough platform.

On Tue, 27 Jul 2004 16:17:14 GMT, "Bart Senior"
wrote:

Why add the extra weight f a battery in the front where you don't want it?

I'd use heavy gauge wire and run it from the house bank.

Ray Cullum wrote

I am considering adding a electric windlass to my boat and I would like

some
opinions on the best way to connect to the electrical system.

The windlass will be approximately 40 feet from my house battery bank

which is
700amps. It has been suggested to me to place a small battery up close to

the
windlass so you don't have to run heavy battery cable such a distance and
sustain the power loss. Small cable could be run to the battery strictly

for
recharging.

Thanks for the help.

Ray Cullum
S/V FROLIC




Jonathan Ganz July 27th 04 06:01 PM

Windlass Electrical Connection
 
Would it make any difference on a boat that large? I think it wouldn't
be a bad thing to have another bat. Also seems like a lot less work,
hassle. Either would work though.

--
"j" ganz @@
www.sailnow.com

"Bart Senior" wrote in message
et...
Why add the extra weight f a battery in the front where you don't want it?

I'd use heavy gauge wire and run it from the house bank.

Ray Cullum wrote

I am considering adding a electric windlass to my boat and I would like

some
opinions on the best way to connect to the electrical system.

The windlass will be approximately 40 feet from my house battery bank

which is
700amps. It has been suggested to me to place a small battery up close

to
the
windlass so you don't have to run heavy battery cable such a distance

and
sustain the power loss. Small cable could be run to the battery

strictly
for
recharging.

Thanks for the help.

Ray Cullum
S/V FROLIC






Jeff Morris July 27th 04 06:12 PM

Windlass Electrical Connection
 
"Marc" wrote in message
...
He doesn't say, but if he's adding a windless, he's probably adding an
all chain rode


Why? Many (most? virtually all?) windlasses now handle rope/chain pretty well.
Certainly there a class of cruiser that prefers all-chain, but I'm not sure this
represents the majority.

and he is probably a cruiser.


True, a racer would have an FX-7

The added weight of a
battery forward (it doesen't have to be in the extreme pointy end) is
negligable when considered with all the other gear he is carrying.


Actually, it might be more than the chain. I have 50 pounds of chain, and a 35
pound windlass. I'm glad I don't have another 50 pounds of battery up there.
Of course, my cat is a bit weight sensitive, so this is an issue for me.


Electrically it makes sense


Why?

and he doesnt even need another output on
the charger, he can use a battery combiner. http://www.yandina.com/
Also, if the battery would be 40' from a 700 amp battery bank, I
suggest he's got a big enough platform.






On Tue, 27 Jul 2004 16:17:14 GMT, "Bart Senior"
wrote:

Why add the extra weight f a battery in the front where you don't want it?

I'd use heavy gauge wire and run it from the house bank.

Ray Cullum wrote

I am considering adding a electric windlass to my boat and I would like

some
opinions on the best way to connect to the electrical system.

The windlass will be approximately 40 feet from my house battery bank

which is
700amps. It has been suggested to me to place a small battery up close to

the
windlass so you don't have to run heavy battery cable such a distance and
sustain the power loss. Small cable could be run to the battery strictly

for
recharging.

Thanks for the help.

Ray Cullum
S/V FROLIC






DSK July 27th 04 06:24 PM

Windlass Electrical Connection
 
Jeff Morris wrote:
I never bought the logic, neither did my builder, who used the "long wire"
approach.


IMHO there are benefits to both approaches, but to choose one over the
other, you need to do some careful math.


Consider, for a 80 foot round trip and an 80 Amp load, you want "2" gauge wire
for a 10% loss.


I think that's a bit on the light side. Most charts only show wire run
lengths up to 60' and a medium size windlass is going to be a 100 amp
load anyway.

A 10% voltage drop is significant. Might knock other things off line,
especially any digital devices. I'd prefer to size things for a lower
voltage drop anyway, where practical.


... Being conservative, you might go to "0" gauge. That 80 feet
weighs 35 pounds. So the result is you would put a 35 pound starting battery in
the bow instead of distributing 35 pounds along the length.

And we're not
talking about all the complications of keeping an extra battery charged and
happy. The only virtue is that you now have some redundancy in a critical area.
But you also have another failure mode.


Either way you go, yo have another failure mode possible. If there is a
short somewhere along the 80' wiring run, the lack of resistance will
kill your whole battery bank really quick, and possibly leave scorch marks.


There are other issues, like how do you prevent 80 amps from going down the
charger wire if you raise the anchor when the engine is running? And if you
don't keep up with the use, how large a battery to you need to ensure you have
the juice to reset the anchor several times, the last time, of course, in the
middle of the night?


Well, how do you insure that your house bank isn't drained by resetting
the anchor in the middle of the night? How do you feel about sawing
holes in bulkheads to run two passes of #0 cable (or bigger) with
looming of course? How about running that big a load to ground and
putting back voltage spike on everything else in your 12V system?

There are plusses and minusses to both running cable and putting in a
dedicated windlass battery. IMHO Ray's case is just over the edge where
it looks like a good case for a dedicated windlass battery.

Fresh Breezes- Doug King



Jeff Morris July 27th 04 07:06 PM

Windlass Electrical Connection
 
You do raise some interesting points, though I don't think any of them are even
close to the downside of an extra battery. For instance, you still need a
fairly large wire run to deal with, though not 1/0. And how do you prevent that
from melting if it ends up carrying the windlass load. BTW, all windlass
connections should be through an appropriate breaker, and should be turned off
when not used - you certainly don't want to start the windlass going if you're
stumbling around the foredeck and trip on a switch! Scorching should not be a
possibility in any proper setup.

The house bank won't get run down (hopefully) because its monitored by an
AmpHour meter, and since the odds are high one will be powering for at least a
few minutes before or after setting or hauling, there should be not problem. A
dedicated battery could have a problem that goes un-noticed until total failure.
If spiking is a concern, the windlass could be wired not to the house bank, but
to the starter battery.


"DSK" wrote in message
...
Jeff Morris wrote:
I never bought the logic, neither did my builder, who used the "long wire"
approach.


IMHO there are benefits to both approaches, but to choose one over the
other, you need to do some careful math.


Consider, for a 80 foot round trip and an 80 Amp load, you want "2" gauge

wire
for a 10% loss.


I think that's a bit on the light side. Most charts only show wire run
lengths up to 60' and a medium size windlass is going to be a 100 amp
load anyway.

A 10% voltage drop is significant. Might knock other things off line,
especially any digital devices. I'd prefer to size things for a lower
voltage drop anyway, where practical.


... Being conservative, you might go to "0" gauge. That 80 feet
weighs 35 pounds. So the result is you would put a 35 pound starting

battery in
the bow instead of distributing 35 pounds along the length.

And we're not
talking about all the complications of keeping an extra battery charged and
happy. The only virtue is that you now have some redundancy in a critical

area.
But you also have another failure mode.


Either way you go, yo have another failure mode possible. If there is a
short somewhere along the 80' wiring run, the lack of resistance will
kill your whole battery bank really quick, and possibly leave scorch marks.


There are other issues, like how do you prevent 80 amps from going down the
charger wire if you raise the anchor when the engine is running? And if you
don't keep up with the use, how large a battery to you need to ensure you

have
the juice to reset the anchor several times, the last time, of course, in

the
middle of the night?


Well, how do you insure that your house bank isn't drained by resetting
the anchor in the middle of the night? How do you feel about sawing
holes in bulkheads to run two passes of #0 cable (or bigger) with
looming of course? How about running that big a load to ground and
putting back voltage spike on everything else in your 12V system?

There are plusses and minusses to both running cable and putting in a
dedicated windlass battery. IMHO Ray's case is just over the edge where
it looks like a good case for a dedicated windlass battery.

Fresh Breezes- Doug King





Peter Wiley July 28th 04 01:52 AM

Windlass Electrical Connection
 
In article , Ray Cullum
wrote:

I am considering adding a electric windlass to my boat and I would like some
opinions on the best way to connect to the electrical system.

The windlass will be approximately 40 feet from my house battery bank which is
700amps. It has been suggested to me to place a small battery up close to the
windlass so you don't have to run heavy battery cable such a distance and
sustain the power loss. Small cable could be run to the battery strictly for
recharging.


You've seen the other replies and the pros/cons. For a different
perspective, have you considered hydraulics? Keep the motor near the
battery bank and run the hydraulic lines to the winch. You can get 12V
DC motors & pumps, run a pump off your main engine via a magnetic
clutch or even a 110V AC motor via invertor.

This is fishing boat tech, not yacht, so of course it may not be as
elegant but it will work much more reliably. I think 12V DC anchor
winches are inventions designed to kill batteries and fail when most
needed.

PDW

Nav July 28th 04 03:03 AM

Windlass Electrical Connection
 


DSK wrote:
Jeff Morris wrote:


Consider, for a 80 foot round trip and an 80 Amp load, you want "2"
gauge wire
for a 10% loss.



I think that's a bit on the light side. Most charts only show wire run
lengths up to 60' and a medium size windlass is going to be a 100 amp
load anyway.

A 10% voltage drop is significant. Might knock other things off line,
especially any digital devices. I'd prefer to size things for a lower
voltage drop anyway, where practical.


The voltage drop will be at the motor, not the house battery end.

Cheers



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