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I am building a Cape George 38 sailboat. The large house bank is about 750
Amp/Hours at 24 volts. I also have a smaller 12 volt house battery and a 12 volt engine starting battery. I don't believe you need a very large vessel to take advantage of a 24 volt system. I have found the following items for 24 volt systems. Large frame 140 amp secondary alternator External regulator 4000 watt inverter / charger Refrigeration and air conditioning system Hydronic diesel furnace Fans for heating and air conditioning systems Radar Chart plotter All interior and exterior lighting Lighting dimmers Battery volt and amp meters Anchor windlass Halyard winch Autopilot control system Autopilot steering motor Electric flush toilet Sewage treatment system control Bilge, pressure water, and fuel transfer pumps Bilge and gray water pump controllers Cabin fans Bilge and exhaust fans Tank gauges Automatic self-cleaning raw water strainer Water maker Items only available in 12 volt, that I know of, are these: Automotive style stereo VHF radio HF SSB radio Propane control panel Instrument system Engine starting system for 51 HP Yanmar Even the instrument system could be powered from the 24 volt autopilot control system. It has an output for that. Anything with a motor will run cooler, and last longer, on 24 volts as opposed to 12 volts. Any item, at the same wattage, will use half the current at 24 volts as at 12 volts. Since power loss in your wiring, and heat in your motors, is based on the square of the current, the loss at 24 volts will be 1/4 the loss at 12 volts. You can take advantage of that by having a much more efficient system with smaller wiring. And smaller wiring is cheaper and lighter. I have heard the auto makers are thinking about going to a nominal 48 volt system. The higher the voltage, the greater the efficiency. This is why industrial motors are 480 volt three-phase, high speed trains draw 12,500 volts or more from overhead lines, and long distance power transmission lines run up to one million volts. A down side is setting up a large 24 volt battery system. I have 12 Trojan industrial cells in the bilge. Another good method is to use four of the Rolls 6 volt batteries or three of their 8 volt batteries. A 24 volt system with all the cells in series is going to be a lot easier to maintain than a large 12 volt system with batteries in some combination of series and parallel. All Ancor marine wiring is rated for 600 volt service, so using it for 24 volts is no problem. Most 12 volt switches also have a 24 volt rating, although it might be a few amps lower. An interesting note: The Blue Sea brand DC light dimmers are rated by current draw. So you can control twice the wattage at 24 volts as you can at 12 volts, with the same dimmer. Rusty O'Shaughnessy S/V Lorgadoir Eolais |
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