skipmac
Well-Known Member
My response re the 100A was really just in relation to the question as to how a 100A current could happen. BTW you comment above:"....there will not be a continuous 100 amp current flowing through the VSR. Maybe a very brief inrush current but that will not over heat anything or cause a fire."
Nice selective quote you just did there. Manage to leave out all the qualifiers I mentioned like "properly sized for your charging system" and "unless there is some kind of problem with the start battery there will not be a continuous 100 amp current flowing through the VSR"
So I had a quick google and almost immediately came upon this link from Sterling:"...we do not want to drain the starter battery or burn out the 80 amp relay or even worse set fire to the cables as the cables would be rated to take 80+ amps and you are now trying to pa 200 amps plus down these cables (a fire in the making). "
http://sterling-power.eu/products-proconnect-info.htm
Note my comment above referring to the charging system. A system includes all the components including any breakers, fuses, relays AND wire. All wire in a system needs to be properly sized to handle max current it might encounter in normal operation (short circuits are not normal and dealt with by proper fusing or breaker). By the way, by their design, alternators are current limited so a 100 amp alternator cannot send a 200 amp surge down a cable.
Aside from that I agree that marine electricians regularly spec VSRs and well specced they're fantastic additions to many many marine applications. FWIW I also think Nigel Calder is a very knowledgeable chap though never met him.
Notwithstanding this, all I'm saying is that a suitable application for VSRs is not where it allows the safety-critical start battery to be endlessly exposed to a voltage, explicitly contraindicated by the battery OEMs.
Well as I've noted several times in this and other threads, Nigel Calder and numerous other experts that have probably forgotten more about marine electric than I have ever known, don't agree. The point is, unless you have a defective charging system or a smart regulator that is programmed incorrectly the voltage that worries you so much is NOT TOO HIGH and will not cause immediate and imminent death of the start battery.[COLOR]
In other words, a quiick few hour motor and the odd few days anchoring with solar running at 14.4V will probably do no harm to a fully-charged start battery combined via a VSR. More than that one needs to be careful and I doubt Calder would disagree with that?
Edit: as an aside many marine systems are designed where the start batteries are not left exposed to unregulated alternator output Unregulated alternator output??? Maybe you mean something else. Unregulated alternator output is AC and 100V or more. (Balmar, Adverc, Sterling, etc). Others use high-end Mastervolt kit, and many others design a simple switching system to keep the start battery safely isolated.
In the end most people sort out their charging needs in a cost-effective and successful manner![]()
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