Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#24
![]()
posted to rec.boats.cruising,rec.boats.building
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Jul 25, 10:39 pm, Lew Hodgett wrote:
Skip Gundlach wrote: We've already got massive batteries. The issue is properly keeping them charged. At 750 nominal (less aging) AH, we can go for a long time with no charge input. A 750AH bank will require an alternator that can put out about 110A-115A at engine idle to properly recharge them. This will require a dual belt drive such as is required to drive a Leece-Neville machine. If you don't need a dual belt drive with your present alternator, you have the wrong alternator. If you discharge this bank by 40%, you have consumed 300AH which must be replaced with 1.25*300 = 375 AH. To replace 375 AH you will require 375/115 = 3.3 hours of engine time. It ain't rocket science. Nobody said wet cell batteries were efficient, but they are mobile. Yes I must confess. In my misspent youth, worked on the engineering team that designed the great-great-great-great-grandfather of the L/N 4800. Lew Hi, Lew, and thanks for the expansion. We have as a target of never letting our batteries get below 75% - and only rarely below 90%. Recent excitement aside, we've succeeded in that. Our original tests of relying solely on solar and wind (last year, on the hard), for 6 months, went very well. Of course, we didn't have the same wind as normally seen in the water, and also didn't run instruments, offsetting that. Our solar and wind were calculated to provide somewhere between 150 low and 300 high AH/Day on average. Continuously cloudy (well, raining - it was completely overcast here at 5 and we were still getting 12A from the solar), windless days will throw that off, of course. However, we watch that meter like a hawk, and having had a bit of training about the interface of volts and amps as to what's happening in there, believe we'll be better managers than before. If we were dependent on our engine alternator entirely for recharging, we'd prolly do something different. However, as backup, but aboard for our use of power tools in strange countries, as well as our hookah rig, we have a 2000w Honda much bruited about here on other occasions. Were it necessary while on the hook, likely we'd start that before the diesel, solely for charging. However, of course, having just slain the dragon of no effective alternator power (and shore charging, too, but we expect that to be so infrequent as to be unworthy of mention other than as powered by a Honda if needed), we have no track record to fall back on. Stay tuned as we live on the hook and under way in the next few weeks... L8R Skip Morgan 461 #2 SV Flying Pig KI4MPC See our galleries at www.justpickone.org/skip/gallery ! Follow us at http://groups.google.com/group/flyingpiglog and/or http://groups.yahoo.com/group/TheFlyingPigLog "You are never given a wish without also being given the power to make it come true. You may have to work for it however." (and) "There is no such thing as a problem without a gift for you in its hands. You seek problems because you need their gifts." (Richard Bach, in The Reluctant Messiah) |