Jaguar 25
Well-Known Member
To change tack completely, what is wrong with using a £40 car battery charger? I have done so for 3 years without any apparent problem and usually going through the 'both' position on the 1 - 2 - Both switch.
To change tack completely, what is wrong with using a £40 car battery charger? I have done so for 3 years without any apparent problem and usually going through the 'both' position on the 1 - 2 - Both switch.
Unless I read the replies wrongly, I am not sure why you would buy 2 CTEK chargers - 1 for each battery. I also have the Sterling procharge ultra. It is a 20 amp charger plus float charge, and charges both my Contessa 26 batteries.
I agree that the CTEK's seem very professional and I reckon they received good feedback; still I have some questions.
They do not seem to be designed for fixed use in boats or whatever; they look more like very handy portable battery chargers one usually keeps in the shop. Is this an important issue?
I agree that the best would be to have two: one of high amperage for the large battery bank (i.e. MXS25 or M300) and one smaller (i.e. MXS10) for the starter battery. The overall price would be still quite convenient with respect to other well known marine chargers with multiple outputs. I have only one alternator and I wonder if connecting them in a permanent way downstream of the decoupling diodes is a problem. In this way I could still use the volt/amp meters present in my system.
My last question: why is the MXS25 cheaper than the equivalent M300? The former seems better...
Daniel
To change tack completely, what is wrong with using a £40 car battery charger? I have done so for 3 years without any apparent problem and usually going through the 'both' position on the 1 - 2 - Both switch.
Non-optimal charge profile, at best you get only a partial charge, at worst they can murder your batteries.To change tack completely, what is wrong with using a £40 car battery charger? ...
In theory you are right but I am afraid you raise several issues which were not taken into consideration when you (and myself) were playing with "valves"Thinking back to the days when I used to play around building my own valve driven amplifiers and radios. Power supplies which basic battery chargers are, are simple and cheap to build so it should be relatively cheap and easy to build a high amperage variable voltage power supply. Anyone done this? Output voltage would need to be variable/switchable between 13.8 and 15.5V and stabilised to take account of fluctuating supply voltages often found in marinas.
In theory you are right but I am afraid you raise several issues which were not taken into consideration when you (and myself) were playing with "valves"
1) batteries are better charged by "smart" chargers which go automatically through different stages depending on many factors. This kind of charger needs a programmed processor with proper interfaces.
2) high amperage power supplies are now far more efficient and less bulky because they are of the switching kind but can be also terribly EM noisy if not very well designed and built.
Referring to what you write I would also add that in charging a battery (i.e. not supplying power to an hifi amplifier) stabilization is not important as far as the average voltage/amperage is well controlled.
Daniel
+1Cetek. Fit and forget, simple, robust and works as a power supply if needed as well.
Cetek. Fit and forget, simple, robust and works as a power supply if needed as well.