pmagowan
Well-Known Member
the starter motor power is rated at 1.4kw according to the workshop manual. Does that equal 116.6 amps in 12 volts?
I presumed that I would wire any Solar to the same place as the charger as they are essentially the same thing.
the starter motor power is rated at 1.4kw according to the workshop manual. Does that equal 116.6 amps in 12 volts?
This is quite confusing. I can easily get charts for cable gauge for all normal cables but the starter cable is generally treated differently! It seems to be accepted that the starter cable will accept more amps than is allowed for its gauge in any other use. This seems to be because it will only be used for a very short time. I can find no table that gives you the recommended gauge for starter cable (perhaps nobody will commit to this given they are working outside normal parameters). The next problem comes when you want to fuse this cable. The fuse will also have more amps drawn through it than it is rated for otherwise the fuse will be so big as to not protect the cable. From my research it seems that, plucking numbers out of the air, a 35mm2 cable would be fine (25mm probably fine) and a 200-250amp fuse should be fine and still protect the cable.
I am quite surprised that this is not clearer. It seems it is a special case where even the regulations bodge it! Or am I wrong
On my previous boat, before I rewired, one day the engine wouldn’t start. I traced the fault to a starter cable that had fractured due to fatigue right at the starter motor. It was very close to making contact with the engine and therefore creating a short and probably a fire/explosion. So I would like to do it right. I always shrink wrap connections anyway.
Yes, but a systems approach to risk means you don’t rely on the user to maintain or inspect. That is a nice extra. It just seems that it must be possible to specify both cable gauge and fuse size for this function. I am not particularly concerned with how other people have ignored the issue in other less important applications.Doing it right would include proper support and looming of cables so they don't fatigue and fracture.
And maybe periodic maintenance inspections.
Tens of millions of cars don't have fuses in the starter circuit.
An updated model
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some questions. I have a d2 40 Volvo located about 1.5m away from the batteries. It is confusing to gauge the wire size for this ?25mm2?
Are the fuses right? Why would I wire the charger to house? Would it not charge house anyway through the VSR?
My understanding is that a galvanic isolator is to prevent you creating a galvanic cell by joining your metal parts to another boats metal parts, through the earth cable, all immersed in sea water as an electrolyte. If your metal bits are either not in sea water or isolated from the earth cable (I.e. not bonded) then a galvanic circuit can not be created. The metal bits that matter would be through hills and the saildrive. The saildrive is isolated from earth and the throughhulls are not bonded.
I think there might be some issue with not bonding metal bits and I think in the USA it is a requirement but I can’t remember the pros.
Can anyone tell me if 35mm2 cable would be ok to work with for all the battery connections? I am thinking if I buy 10m of this in each colour I can make my battery interconnects and main wiring all in the same size. Then I can get smaller cable to work with as per required rating for normal wiring after the distribution panel.
On my previous boat, before I rewired, one day the engine wouldn’t start. I traced the fault to a starter cable that had fractured due to fatigue right at the starter motor. It was very close to making contact with the engine and therefore creating a short and probably a fire/explosion. So I would like to do it right. I always shrink wrap connections anyway.
Some people would go as far as to get rid of the battery monitor, because all that shunt is doing is measure how badly it is reducing your charge current?
This might not be an issue if you don't care about fast charging, or you mostly charge from shore power, or you have battery sensing (doublesided) on your alternator.