Stemar
Well-Known Member
A friend is preparing his boat for a cruise to an area where plugging in every night won't be an option. He's asked me for an opinion on the BEP 716 cluster http://www.bepmarine.com/home-mainmenu-8/product-278/ which has been recommended to him as a replacement for his currrent 0-1-2-both switch.
At close to £130, apart from profit for the supplier (who's making the recommendation) I can't see what advantage it has over keeping the switch and adding a VSR for change from £30. What, if anything, am I missing?
His boat has a 300AH sealed lead acid domestic bank and a 60AH AGM starter battery. Currently, he does everything off the domestics and keeps the starter for emergencies. I reckon he'd do better to keep the domestic side of things on the domestic bank and isolate the AGM with the alternator hard-wired to it, as battery 1 for normal starting, keeping the domestic bank as backup on 2, charging through the VSR. That way, the starter battery gets first dibs on alternator output so you can always (!) start the engine, and the domestic bank gets what's left. If he doesn't run the engine enough, he'll just have to live with warm beer.
I'm also going to suggest solar panels, but I doubt he'll be willing to fit enough to keep up with the fridge.
He will also be fitting an anchor windlass run from a battery in the bow. The same supplier wants to sell him a £150 15A 12v-12v charger (or a £300 30A one). I can see theoretical advantages, but what practical advantage would that have over simply charging it in parallel with the domestice or the starter battery through a schottky diode to stop back charging?
Any thoughts?
At close to £130, apart from profit for the supplier (who's making the recommendation) I can't see what advantage it has over keeping the switch and adding a VSR for change from £30. What, if anything, am I missing?
His boat has a 300AH sealed lead acid domestic bank and a 60AH AGM starter battery. Currently, he does everything off the domestics and keeps the starter for emergencies. I reckon he'd do better to keep the domestic side of things on the domestic bank and isolate the AGM with the alternator hard-wired to it, as battery 1 for normal starting, keeping the domestic bank as backup on 2, charging through the VSR. That way, the starter battery gets first dibs on alternator output so you can always (!) start the engine, and the domestic bank gets what's left. If he doesn't run the engine enough, he'll just have to live with warm beer.
I'm also going to suggest solar panels, but I doubt he'll be willing to fit enough to keep up with the fridge.
He will also be fitting an anchor windlass run from a battery in the bow. The same supplier wants to sell him a £150 15A 12v-12v charger (or a £300 30A one). I can see theoretical advantages, but what practical advantage would that have over simply charging it in parallel with the domestice or the starter battery through a schottky diode to stop back charging?
Any thoughts?