Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#17
![]()
posted to rec.boats.cruising
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Post on equipment performance
For those persons who did not read the complete thread this is about onboard energy. How many DC amp-hours per day is too many? If you want a wide range response to a question about cruising boats and any components performance ask your question on this cruisers Forum. I try to follow all web posts relating to information about boat refrigeration and equipment needed to support refrigeration. Most of the time I am looking for factual quantified answers to questions. If you have read this thread closely discounting opinions and theories there may be valuable information you can use in making your own decision about boat refrigeration. Refrigeration on boats is expensive and is a luxury and is not required by every boater. If a boat is equipped 12 Volt refrigeration it will be the largest consumer of electrical energy on a cruising sailboat. How large of a refrigerator/freezer can a boat's DC electrical system support without an onboard gen-set? I Believe 100 amp-hrs per day is too much others seem to manage much higher DC usage, as much as 200 amp-hrs per day. Boats cruising with 12 volt refrigeration above Latitude 36N in this country may consume 50% less energy for refrigeration than those cruising south of 36N. When electrical energy is not available 24 hours a day then holdover plates can be used to store energy. If refrigerated boxes are too large to be supported from electrical energy then engine driven compressor refrigeration or a gen-set power would be the answer. Info quotes from Forums: I don't have any experience with the 2000, but have found the Honda specs to be pretty accurate with the 1000. I run it a 45 amp charger with it. Anyway, I think we have a close enough ballbark on fuel consumption and output for planning/comparison purposes. 15 hours on 1.1 gallons at 500 watts might be stretching reality a bit, but it's not far off. I own EU1000i and EU3000is. The 1000 is uncanny. 40A at 14.2V = 568 watts plus some charger in efficiency so that would be around 600 to 650 watts so Skip's observations are very close. But we consume mass quantities of ice, about a 10# block of ice every couple of days during a Chesapeake summer. Cubes go faster, but their primary purpose is to cool my Admiral's drinks. Would love to have a fridge, but we can buy quite a few years' supply of ice for the upfront cost and backside power requirements. In my case, easy to say bigger alternator and larger battery bank but we're talking about a 20 hp engine and very limited space and weight capacity for additional batteries. Refrigeration certainly is a desirable feature, but we're enjoying the simplicity of our systems. With less to break, we can enjoy the boat more. We've other reasons to go in for ice. The fresh water gets empty or the holding tank gets full at about the same time. Most of the boats I see here use exactly that system. The more up-market ones have a duel system with both engine driven and A.C. powered compressors for use at sea and in the marina. We are a family of four and are power hogs with kids DVD's and PC use. Our boat has a poorly insulated iceBox with a AB CU-200 system that uses 5amps and typically runs maybe 10-15hrs/day. Our 260W of solar and MPPT controler puts out about 60-70AH/day Battery bank is 900AH We use about 140-200AH/day The engine alternator is a 105A unit and we are getting ready to install a gen/water maker combo unit with an additional 105A alternator that will burn about 1/6gal/hr of diesel. My Honda 2000eu runs my Iota 75AMP battery charger, but I don't really know fuel usage yet because we use it so infrequently. The honda stays at load with the 75A charger. |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
How many amps to start this unit? | Cruising | |||
How many amps to start this unit? | Electronics | |||
Circuit Breaker Trip Amps | Electronics | |||
Amps draw per horsepower | Electronics | |||
Amps drawn per H.P. | Electronics |