syvictoria
Well-Known Member
Thanks again for the replies. I have 225Ahr (Trojans) and so the above suggests that something like a CTEK M300 might actually be sufficient?
Most battery manufacturers recommend a charging current of 20% of battery capacity (C) - that's C/5. Trojan recommend C/10 or 10%. Allowing for inefficiencies and the load taken by the boat a charger of C/4 or 25% of C would be best for most batteries. For your 450 Ah Trojans that should be about 13% or C/8 = a 60 amp charger. So you need one 50% bigger!
Most unlikely. You fudge factor is much too low...
....then a larger charger would only help for a few hours.......... so I assume that you are saying a 100A charger would probably push in 100A for an hour and then drop fairly quickly to same levels I'm getting from my 40A charger............Does it sound sensible to buy a second single output 20-40A charger instead of replacing my existing charger?......
BartW,surprising, all ports in the SOF we have been, (except one, port Napoleon) is leccy included in the mooring price, also for long term.
which area / ports have you been ?
I've been cruising now for 2 1/2 years, 1 1/2 years of which I have spent in the Med and must say that I have not come across many marinas in the Med which offer free electricity to long term berth holders - Cartagena in Spain until recently had a "all in" policy for monohulls but have changed that now as there was major abuse.
In my view shore power is vital in winter to keep the batteries topped up and to keep warm in the Med!
Hi. We're going to be moving aboard permanently this summer (yippeee!!) and then, hopefully, going through the canals to the Med not long after. We don't currently have shore power fitted, as we don't have any real need for it and we're keeping everything on board as simple as possible. We'll only have 12v electronics on board, we're electrically frugal (very, even on land!) and will have solar for battery charging plus motoring now and then, and we will have a charcoal Pansy for heating (maybe a little under powered in some places for a 30 footer, but we'll have blankets and hot water bottles too!). Our budget is going to be tight, but for us this lifestyle is about travelling and so we will want to visit larger towns and cities around the Med, and there's obviously over-wintering, and so some marina use is going to be unavoidable. Therefore, my question is, how often is electricity included for 'free' as part of marina berthing costs, as opposed to being metered? Is it more common in some countries than others?
Assuming that this is realistically likely to be somewhere where our budget is currently going to effectively be wasted, what is the easiest, KISS, and most cost effective option for installing a method of (worldwide) battery charging from a mains supply? Battery charging would seem to me to be the best method of utilising this 'free' resource, or are we overlooking/missing something else in our setup?
TIA!
This seems to fit the KISS principle perfectly, but is it suitable?
http://www.screwfix.com/p/nexus-13a-2g-rcd-switched-socket/91095#
Not after you have used a wet and dry one to vacuum out corners of bilges, catch shavings from holes drilled and get rid of a lot of sahara dust.... but a vacuum cleaner on a 30' yacht - that possibly seems a little extravagant...!!!![]()