pvb
Well-Known Member
As it's over 4 years since the OP asked the question, I'd expect he'd have decided long ago!
Dont spoil itAs it's over 4 years since the OP asked the question, I'd expect he'd have decided long ago!
I am thinking of installing an alternator to battery charger (a Sterling Alternator-to-Battery Charger - http://www.marine-super-store.com/posit/shop/index.php?selectedpartno=99197766). Has anyone any experience of these? Are there better/cheaper alternatives?
The a to b charger basically fills 2 jobs. It acts to boost the output from the alternator and thereby decrease charging time.
I've had mine for a year and has transformed our experience.
How does that work, then? If it increases the volts to push more charge in it'll decrease the amps, so less charge will go in and if it increases the amps it'll decrease the volts, so less charge will go in.
i wonder - and I am not trying to be mean or contentious here - how much of that is psychological. You have the same alternator, I presume, so you have the same charging power available, but now with a complicated box of electronic involved as well. I suppose it can do complicated things with charging regime, but these have never convinced me, particularly, and when ones goes to huge lengths to get that last 5% of possible charge in ... well, it's still only 5%. Want to store more? Buy a bigger battery. Want to charge faster? Buy a bigger alternator.
I confess that I have an Adverc fitted, but only because I rather naively bought it when I got the boat and thought I might as well fit it. I don't kid myself that it does anything useful.
I fitted a Sterling A2B two years ago along with beefing up the harness to the domestic bank. I eliminated the VSR that had kept the starter and domestic banks isolated from one another because the A2B does that job.
It was simple to fit and has boosted the alternator output by about 75%. I have no idea as to how the box works but it does: the only uncertainty is that because I beefed up the wires to the battery how much of the improvement is down to the wiring and how much to the box of tricks?
How does that work, then? If it increases the volts to push more charge in it'll decrease the amps, so less charge will go in and if it increases the amps it'll decrease the volts, so less charge will go in.
The amount of charge going into a battery depends on the battage applied to the battery. The voltage and hence the current may be limited by the capacity of the charging source to maintain that voltage at the current going into the battery.
Now generally the current capability of the alternator is NOT a limiting factor in the charge going into the battery. It an be on really big battey systems so just check.
The A to B charger takes the DC as found at the starter battery /output of alternator say 13volts under charge. By rapid switching transforming and rectifying it produces a voltage of about 15volts. * This voltage does push a larger current into the domestic battery. However the current being taken from the alternator/engine battery will be higher by a factor of the ratio of volts in to volts out and the inefficiencies of the converter. Perhaps 90% efficient. So typically 20 amps intot he battery will take 25 amps from the alternator. The a to B charger looks like any other electrical load to the alternator like lights on a car ie current is only slightly (ie linearly) dependent on voltage.
So assuming your alternator has the capacity then the a to B charger can push more current into the domestic battery than the hard wire connection via switches. VSR or 1,2,both switch)
The alternator regulator should maintain the normal charge voltage so charging the engine battery to about 13.75 or 14 volts but this may sag a bit with the load of the a to b charger. The a to b charger only begins charging when the engine batttery gets over about 13 volts so only when alternator is charging.
*The voltage the a to b charger actually presents to the battery to push the current in is actually set by algorythms and on the basis of the charge state of the battery. So initially high then down to float etc. The same as alternator controllers of mains chargers. good luck olewill
*The voltage the a to b charger actually presents to the battery to push the current in is actually set by algorythms and on the basis of the charge state of the battery. So initially high then down to float etc. The same as alternator controllers ...
The A to B charger takes the DC as found at the starter battery /output of alternator say 13volts under charge. By rapid switching transforming and rectifying it produces a voltage of about 15volts. * This voltage does push a larger current into the domestic battery.
Heck of a lot cheaper and simpler to buy a better alternator. Mine give 14.4V, traditional ones 13.8V. A 13V alternator is knackered.
BUT how many amps after 5 minutes.
with my newly acquired Adverc i still get 20 amps after 1/2 hr if the batts are low