syfuga
Well-Known Member
Alternators and Gensets..
Nobody seems to have stated the vital first step: you need to make a list of your power requirements under way and while stationary. This needs to be in terms of ampere-hours over a 24 hour period. You will find that continuously running kit, fridges, freezers, air conditioning, inverters (idle and under load) computers will be the significant draw, followed by instruments etc. Electric toilets, anchor winches, halyard and sheet winches, if carried, may take lots of amperes, but their duty cycle is very short, so the power required is not so great.
This then governs the balancing act that you must follow:
That should give you a clue as to the size of your service batteries. The greater the capacity, the less percentage discharge, the more efficiency and longer life you will obtain. If you aim to draw no more than 20% of your theoretical capacity per day, you are about right.
Once you have the battery bank, you need to consider how to charge it within a reasonable time. Large battery chargers are expensive, and create heat, so that needs to be taken into account.
People say that AGM batteries are better and can be charged quicker. My experience (I fitted some) is that they do not fulfil their promise and are horrendously expensive.
We started out by fitting a small diesel generator (3.5kw). Until this year it has been very unreliable, but we have had a very good year from it. Nevertheless it cost £4K in 2003, and an additional £2K in bits and pieces to plumb it in. While we would not be without it, because it keeps us at anchor, it was a very poor investment, working out at £3 per hour so far, excluding all the spares and hassle.
Do not be sold on a larger generator than you sensibly need: it will simply be less efficient, and is far better under reasonable load. You would be a masochist to fit two big ones!
We do not have a wind generator. One of the better ones would give much better value if you reckon to have wind where you are going. In the Med, they are only of benefit sporadically. Say £1200 or so. With a reliable wind you are going to get perhaps 60AH+ most days.
You don't say what HP engine you have. This may govern the sensible limit of any alternator. You may want to put an auxilliary drive and have a second alternator, as some power their refrigeration this way. Over 80A you need a hefty drive belt or dual drive. As others have said, your engine is not efficient for charging batteries unless it is used for propulsion, and it is indeed bad for the engine as it will polish the cylinders under low load. Our engine uses 3 litres an hour (48HP) but our generator uses one third of a litre an hour. Make sure you have an intelligent voltage sensing charge controller fitted to your alternator: it turns the engine into a 4-stage charger, and will bring the batteries up faster.
A much better investment is solar power. Consider a gantry, and any way you can get more of them deployed, the better. They are silent, trouble free, and efficient in terms of cost per ampere generated. We carry 150W, but would like more. Again, you need a regulator.
We carry a towed generator. We have never used it, but my son took it around the world. It is a nuisance to deploy and recover, and will slow you down a bit, but it is a source of reliable power on long journeys. You can reckon on about 6A at 5 knots I believe.
If you are not electrically savvy, find someone who is to help you.
Nobody seems to have stated the vital first step: you need to make a list of your power requirements under way and while stationary. This needs to be in terms of ampere-hours over a 24 hour period. You will find that continuously running kit, fridges, freezers, air conditioning, inverters (idle and under load) computers will be the significant draw, followed by instruments etc. Electric toilets, anchor winches, halyard and sheet winches, if carried, may take lots of amperes, but their duty cycle is very short, so the power required is not so great.
This then governs the balancing act that you must follow:
That should give you a clue as to the size of your service batteries. The greater the capacity, the less percentage discharge, the more efficiency and longer life you will obtain. If you aim to draw no more than 20% of your theoretical capacity per day, you are about right.
Once you have the battery bank, you need to consider how to charge it within a reasonable time. Large battery chargers are expensive, and create heat, so that needs to be taken into account.
People say that AGM batteries are better and can be charged quicker. My experience (I fitted some) is that they do not fulfil their promise and are horrendously expensive.
We started out by fitting a small diesel generator (3.5kw). Until this year it has been very unreliable, but we have had a very good year from it. Nevertheless it cost £4K in 2003, and an additional £2K in bits and pieces to plumb it in. While we would not be without it, because it keeps us at anchor, it was a very poor investment, working out at £3 per hour so far, excluding all the spares and hassle.
Do not be sold on a larger generator than you sensibly need: it will simply be less efficient, and is far better under reasonable load. You would be a masochist to fit two big ones!
We do not have a wind generator. One of the better ones would give much better value if you reckon to have wind where you are going. In the Med, they are only of benefit sporadically. Say £1200 or so. With a reliable wind you are going to get perhaps 60AH+ most days.
You don't say what HP engine you have. This may govern the sensible limit of any alternator. You may want to put an auxilliary drive and have a second alternator, as some power their refrigeration this way. Over 80A you need a hefty drive belt or dual drive. As others have said, your engine is not efficient for charging batteries unless it is used for propulsion, and it is indeed bad for the engine as it will polish the cylinders under low load. Our engine uses 3 litres an hour (48HP) but our generator uses one third of a litre an hour. Make sure you have an intelligent voltage sensing charge controller fitted to your alternator: it turns the engine into a 4-stage charger, and will bring the batteries up faster.
A much better investment is solar power. Consider a gantry, and any way you can get more of them deployed, the better. They are silent, trouble free, and efficient in terms of cost per ampere generated. We carry 150W, but would like more. Again, you need a regulator.
We carry a towed generator. We have never used it, but my son took it around the world. It is a nuisance to deploy and recover, and will slow you down a bit, but it is a source of reliable power on long journeys. You can reckon on about 6A at 5 knots I believe.
If you are not electrically savvy, find someone who is to help you.