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Thanks all -
It looks like if I go this route I'll either spring for the 2000, or check out the "power sharing" feature. BTW, I'm thinking about this because every year I find myself hanging out in some anchorage for a week or so, running the engine for an hour and a half every day, wishing I had a wind generator or lots more solar panels. But then I work out the pricing and the hassles, and I start thinking that a neighbor in the anchorage would probably appreciate a windmill running 24/7 less then an ultra-quiet genset running 2 hours a day. Ironically, when we bought the boat, we had a choice of twin diesels, or twin 9.9 outboards. One of the major factors was that the diesels could generate a lot more juice, and adding a proper genset would almost equalize the weight and cost issues The builder however, said that I should just keep a portable Honda in a locker and pull it out when needed - now it looks like we might be doing just that. (For the record, I'm still glad we got the diesels - I just hate to run them for charging alone!) -- -jeff www.sv-loki.com "I like sailing because it is the sport which demands the least energy" Albert Einstein "Chris Newport" wrote in message news:3120722.S4CdkZmr6U@callisto... On Thursday 27 May 2004 7:26 pm in rec.boats.cruising Jeff Morris wrote: I have a follow-on question: What will happen if I hook a Honda EU1000 to a Heart 2000 charger, which would like to charge at 100 Amps? Will it settle at some compromise charge rate, or will it roll over and die? 100 amps at 12 volts is 1200 watts, but add some ineffiency and the load will probably be about 1400 watts. This type of overload is nasty - it is too small to blow a fuse or trip a breaker. What happens will depend on the actual available power of the engine. If the engine is only just good enough for 1000 watts it will slow down and may eventually stall, but it will almost certainly overheat. If the engine has power in reserve the generator becomes the weak point. Once again a sustained overload will cause overheating, in this case the enamel insulation in the windings will be damaged causing internal shorts. This leads to the escape of the magic smoke, requiring expensive repairs or consignment to the rubbish heap. |
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