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Best 19" HD flat screen TV for cruising
The microwave goes overboard. Use the stove for cooking. When heating water, make extra and store in a thermos. I'm still using my laptop for "TV". No external display yet. All lights converted to LED. Remember you don't want to totally kill your batteries. Adding another pair of batteries will of course double that and is the less expensive route then LED lighting. not so sure about that one... Rick -- Richard Lamb |
Best 19" HD flat screen TV for cruising
On Thu, 14 Oct 2010 11:35:31 -0500, CaveLamb
wrote: The microwave goes overboard. Oh no, don't do that. How will you reheat the left overs, cook the instant frozen dinners and warm up the coffee? The microwave also makes a good bread box when not heating things and I understand some people have used them to dry their wet cat (once). In all seriousness, they are very efficient at quickly heating things, and for you propane and alcohol users, provide an alternative way of cooking if the fuel runs out. |
Best 19" HD flat screen TV for cruising
Wayne.B wrote:
On Thu, 14 Oct 2010 11:35:31 -0500, CaveLamb wrote: The microwave goes overboard. Oh no, don't do that. How will you reheat the left overs, cook the instant frozen dinners and warm up the coffee? The microwave also makes a good bread box when not heating things and I understand some people have used them to dry their wet cat (once). In all seriousness, they are very efficient at quickly heating things, and for you propane and alcohol users, provide an alternative way of cooking if the fuel runs out. I think you got that last part backwards, Wayne. The alcohol or propane will still work long after the batteries are dead. -- Richard Lamb |
Best 19" HD flat screen TV for cruising
On Thu, 14 Oct 2010 12:13:51 -0500, CaveLamb
wrote: In all seriousness, they are very efficient at quickly heating things, and for you propane and alcohol users, provide an alternative way of cooking if the fuel runs out. I think you got that last part backwards, Wayne. The alcohol or propane will still work long after the batteries are dead. I've been on boats that ran out of propane for various reasons, not good for crew morale. I view batteries as a renewable resource as long as the engine and diesel fuel hold out. Our trawler is an "all electric" boat - no stove fuel of any kind. I've come to appreciate that when I see people schlepping various stove fuels in their dinghy or trying to find the right adapter in a foreign country. |
Best 19" HD flat screen TV for cruising
On Thu, 14 Oct 2010 13:35:58 -0400, Wayne.B
wrote: On Thu, 14 Oct 2010 12:13:51 -0500, CaveLamb wrote: In all seriousness, they are very efficient at quickly heating things, and for you propane and alcohol users, provide an alternative way of cooking if the fuel runs out. I think you got that last part backwards, Wayne. The alcohol or propane will still work long after the batteries are dead. I've been on boats that ran out of propane for various reasons, not good for crew morale. I view batteries as a renewable resource as long as the engine and diesel fuel hold out. Our trawler is an "all electric" boat - no stove fuel of any kind. I've come to appreciate that when I see people schlepping various stove fuels in their dinghy or trying to find the right adapter in a foreign country. I think that there is a different mind set in the two types of boats. Sail boat people all seem intent on saving electricity; trawler people don't seem to give a hoot and have ice makers and all kinds of helpful things. I have a friend, has a 55 ft. ferro-cement ketch - 125 HP engine (and a small gasoline gen set) and is forever saving electricity. He has a separate inverter, sized for the usage, on every AC appliance in the boat, LED lights that are too dim to read with, and is forever worrying about amps. AND, he has an engine powered freezer and refrigerator which he uses on trips.... I also know a motor boat guy that has all AC except for the radio and nav lights. 150 HP engine (and no gen set :-) Cheers, Bruce (bruceinbangkokatgmaildotcom) |
Best 19" HD flat screen TV for cruising
On Thu, 14 Oct 2010 08:43:16 -0400, Wayne.B
wrote: If you want normal life from your inverter batts it is important to limit the discharge level to less than 50% (about 11.7 volts when under load). The net result is that you need twice as many amp-hours as your energy budget, perhaps more if your recharge time is limited. It take quite a while to bring the charge level back to a full 100% because the acceptance rate tapers off once you are above about 80%. A good design point for A-H capacity is 3 times your energy budget. Wayne, the 50% rule doesn't really apply to golf cart batteries. Back in my electric car days there was a "trick" we used when we were stupid and came to a stop from totally discharged batteries. Wait 10 to 20 minutes for the batteries to "self charge", then play egg-on-accelerator and we'd get another mile or two. Wait and repeat. Sometimes it took three or four of these cycles to get home. Having said that, it's a good idea to limit to 20%, simply because most inverters will shut down around that point. A good point on taking a while to bring to a full charge. A lot of folks think you can just pump in the Amps with a big alternator, but it doesn't work that way in the real world. A bit of golf cart battery advice. There are two battery manufacturers in the USA, and they pretty much do the same thing. We bought the same batteries from Sam's for $72 each as the local dealer had for $160 each. By same I mean the same brand and model. Re microwaves and coffee pots. It boils down to personal preference and the boat systems. In our case we had enough solar so it was "free" renewable energy as opposed to burning propane that we had to replace. Rick |
Best 19" HD flat screen TV for cruising
On 10/14/2010 3:24 AM, Rick Morel wrote:
On Wed, 13 Oct 2010 18:18:13 -0700, Stephen Trapani wrote: Well, occasional microwave, charge cell phones, morning and afternoon coffee, lights, and hopefully a TV/dvr. Kind of putting it all together... I haven't seen the "brick" powered TV's in quite a while. Maybe at a flea market or something? The Golf Cart batteries are the best. Two in series should be fine for what you want, but let's see. Daily power, taking your "list" above out of order: First, to determine the daily power requirements you have to take the current draw, Amps, of each thing and multiply by the number of hours used to get the Amp Hours per day of each. Remember, anything powered by the inverter is going to be the 120VAC Watts divided by 10 for 12V Amps. We'll do that below, with best guesses. Lights: I'm sure your talking 12V ones. The anchor light is the biggie, with incandescent at about 1.5 Amps for 12 hrs. [ 18 Amp Hours ] LED would be about 2 Amp Hours, but cost more than a couple more battereis. Inside lighting. Varies, but say 2.5 Amps for 5 hours. [ 12.5 Amp Hours ] Same as above for LED inside lighting, but not as expensive. Charging cell phone: Negligible if you have a 12V charger. Coffee: We had a 10-cup with thermos type carafe. It drew 75 Amps and ran for 5 minutes. Just to make it easy, let's say 6 minutes, 1/10 of an hour or 7.5 Amp Hours per pot. Morning and afternoon then are [ 15 Amp Hours ] Microwave: We get a bit iffy here. Our 800 or 900 Watt one, I forget which, drew about 95 Amps. That works out to about 1.6 Amp Hours per minute of use ( 95 / 60 ). So you don't want to use it too much. Let's say a couple meals reheated and a few cups of coffee and put it at 15 minutes. 15 X 1.6 = [ 24 Amp Hours ] TV/DVD: Ours, using both was about 5 Amps as I recall. Figuring 4 hours in the evening and 1 hour of news in the morning, that's [ 25 Amp Hours ] Adding it all up, the total is: [ 94.5 Amp Hours per day ] So you're looking at basically 2 days with your batteries. With LED anchor and inside lighting, [ 68 Amp Hours per day ] Quite a difference. Basically almost 3 days. Remember you don't want to totally kill your batteries. Adding another pair of batteries will of course double that and is the less expensive route then LED lighting. Hey, thanks Rick! Just for jollies I looked at the back of my 42" home HDTV (plasma) and it said 387watts, so do I have it right that since watts = amps/volts, this TV will consume 387/120 = 3.2amps , so 3.2 amphours per hour? Stephen |
Best 19" HD flat screen TV for cruising
On Fri, 15 Oct 2010 08:19:56 -0500, Rick Morel
wrote: Wayne, the 50% rule doesn't really apply to golf cart batteries. Back in my electric car days there was a "trick" we used when we were stupid and came to a stop from totally discharged batteries. Wait 10 to 20 minutes for the batteries to "self charge", then play egg-on-accelerator and we'd get another mile or two. Wait and repeat. Sometimes it took three or four of these cycles to get home. Having said that, it's a good idea to limit to 20%, simply because most inverters will shut down around that point. I'm sure that it's possible to get away with an 80% discharge for some period of time. I've seen some fairly convincing life cycle charts however that seem to indicate greatly increased battery life at the 50% level as opposed to 80%. I like to baby our house batts as much as possible given the expense and difficulty of replacing them. See "Cycles vs Lifespan" at: http://www.windsun.com/Batteries/Battery_FAQ.htm http://img32.imageshack.us/img32/9595/batterydod.gif (from site: http://www.mpoweruk.com/life.htm ) |
Best 19" HD flat screen TV for cruising
On Fri, 15 Oct 2010 07:44:48 -0700, Stephen Trapani
wrote: Hey, thanks Rick! Just for jollies I looked at the back of my 42" home HDTV (plasma) and it said 387watts, so do I have it right that since watts = amps/volts, this TV will consume 387/120 = 3.2amps , so 3.2 amphours per hour? Stephen That's correct. 3.2 Amps at 120VAC, but using the 10% rule, that's 38.7 Amps at 12V through an inverter! Or 32 Amps at 12V if the inverter were 100% efficient. The smaller the TV, the lower it's Wattage. As I recall our 16" LCD was 40 Watts, so about 4 Amps at 12V through the inverter. Rick |
Best 19" HD flat screen TV for cruising
On Fri, 15 Oct 2010 12:21:15 -0400, Wayne.B
wrote: I'm sure that it's possible to get away with an 80% discharge for some period of time. I've seen some fairly convincing life cycle charts however that seem to indicate greatly increased battery life at the 50% level as opposed to 80%. I like to baby our house batts as much as possible given the expense and difficulty of replacing them. See "Cycles vs Lifespan" at: http://www.windsun.com/Batteries/Battery_FAQ.htm http://img32.imageshack.us/img32/9595/batterydod.gif (from site: http://www.mpoweruk.com/life.htm ) I agree about babying one's house bank, as long as it doesn't limit the use of them. Like everything else, it's a trade off. Here's data from real world experience. It's simply what was, with no claims: Back in my EV days, we had a group of about 30 that had built our own cars or pickups. Each one of them used 20 golf cart batteries in series. Note that we all recharged at the C/10 rate ( Amp Hour Capacity divided by 10 ) and recharged daily. Next to overcharging, the next best way to destroy a lead / acid battery is to delay charging, allowing sulfation. We made very sure to keep the electrolyte above the plates and we did an equalizing charge monthly. We got an average of 3,600 charges, with a few getting about 7,000. To explain, our batteries lasted 8 to 12 years. These were our regular cars. Some of us commuted to work daily. Some barely took the surface charge off the batts most days, some slmost killed them dead each workday. That doubled figure were for the few that had really long commutes and/or their workplace supplied sockets to recharge. Two of the group rigged up a generator on a trailer to extend their range. Note they couldn't pull a large enough generator to go indefinitely, just enough to double or triple the range. The motors drew about 140 Amps or so at highway speeds. This seems to say that lead / acid batteries are somewhat like a clock - wind it up once and it's going to work for X length of time. The fact that regular car batteries seem to last about 2 years says the same thing. Note that we all had several batteries fail at one time or another during that period. I had one go after a couple months that was replaced under warranty. I don't remember now just when, but I had two others go out over the years. To repeat, we all got 8 to 12 years from our batteries, whether we discharged them to 10 or 20 or 50 or 70 or 90 per cent daily. We got many more cycles than the graphs say - most of us should have gotten a year or two or three. Maybe because we did otherwise baby them, or maybe because the published figures are worse case, or both? In any event, if I were to be a weekend sailor and planned on discharging to 20% or so, I don't think it would be worth it to buy an extra pair of batteries and have the extra weight and space taken up. I'd still be getting a pretty long life out of them. Long term cruising is a different story - I packed 'um in, as many as I could! Rick |
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