AC/DC . . . no, not that - the ship's power - Help!
Posted: Oct 19th, '06, 11:06
I am totally verklempt. Trying to design the electrical system for Dreamsicle. Here's where I am. Pair of 6BTA-300's. That's it. I can do anything at this point and have spent restless days on the internet and sleepless nights trying to figure it all out. I'm planning this as a day boat, day fishing on the Bay (no off-shore runs for tuna) and a picnic boat/creek cruiser. Possibly rare over nights.
1. Do I need 8D's on each of those beasts or will 4D's work? Do I need a separate house battery?
2. I would like a battery management system that leaves the human element out as far as making decisions about which batteries to use, which need charging, etc. Have spoken to several manufaturers and all insist that their top-of-the-line system is necessary. Not to be skeptical of the salespeople but . . . money doesn't grow on trees in my yard. One did suggest that with the use I project that I wire for a third house battery but at this point use just the two big beast batteries, one to start and one for house with a momentary switch for backup if the start battery needs a boost.
3. One suggests an isolation transformer in place of the galvanic isolator and polarity indicator. Sounds a bit over the top for my application. I've drawn the schematics for all that I plan but still feel overwhelmed by this battery management.
4. Isolating everything from everything is a concept I understand in theory but in application I'm still trying to put the pieces together. Every manufacturer I speak with sells me on the practicality of his or her products, but when I ask that they lay it out (Schematic) so that I know where things go they all balk. No one in our litigious world wants to take resposibility. How do I get there from here?
Damn, guys, I've designed and installed entire wiring systems in houses and cars for forty years and with boats I feel like a total maroon. There are three systems, all interconnected and sitting in salt water. Whew!
There are probably other questions I should ask but at this point I'm not sure what they are.
Alright gang, let the fun begin.
1. Do I need 8D's on each of those beasts or will 4D's work? Do I need a separate house battery?
2. I would like a battery management system that leaves the human element out as far as making decisions about which batteries to use, which need charging, etc. Have spoken to several manufaturers and all insist that their top-of-the-line system is necessary. Not to be skeptical of the salespeople but . . . money doesn't grow on trees in my yard. One did suggest that with the use I project that I wire for a third house battery but at this point use just the two big beast batteries, one to start and one for house with a momentary switch for backup if the start battery needs a boost.
3. One suggests an isolation transformer in place of the galvanic isolator and polarity indicator. Sounds a bit over the top for my application. I've drawn the schematics for all that I plan but still feel overwhelmed by this battery management.
4. Isolating everything from everything is a concept I understand in theory but in application I'm still trying to put the pieces together. Every manufacturer I speak with sells me on the practicality of his or her products, but when I ask that they lay it out (Schematic) so that I know where things go they all balk. No one in our litigious world wants to take resposibility. How do I get there from here?
Damn, guys, I've designed and installed entire wiring systems in houses and cars for forty years and with boats I feel like a total maroon. There are three systems, all interconnected and sitting in salt water. Whew!
There are probably other questions I should ask but at this point I'm not sure what they are.
Alright gang, let the fun begin.