Airmapper
Inactive Member
I'm building a portable power pack, one of those plastic Ammo boxes with a 12v battery in it for miscellaneous power needs when camping and around the house.
I'm using a 12v 18ah/20hours battery. Common size, inexpensive ($30) and easily replaceable, but also not a pain to haul around.
I intend to use it while camping / traveling, so if I'm in a situation where I don't have down time or handy access to 110AC for a while, I might run it down and want to re-charge it from the vehicle.
My vehicle battery is a 100ah/20hours Odyssey 2150.
I've been researching DC to DC charging, and to the best I can figure, I should be fine connecting it directly into my 12v DC port (I have a handy always hot one in my rear cargo hatch area) and I can charge my small battery from that while driving around.
One concern I have is that power port is not intended for heavy loads, can a low battery draw enough to be an issue? I think it is fused for 15amps but it runs the entire length of the vehicle on small wires, so if the battery can pull a large load attempting to charge that might not work. Without regulation I assume the battery will attempt to draw as much power as it's able to absorb, at higher charge that won't be much, but if it's low I'm not sure how much it can draw.
Since my port stays hot when I turn off the key I should probably unhook it if stopped for a while, as the different size batteries will probably be constantly trying to drain each other due to the mismatch. My Odyssey likes to settle to about 12.7v-ish, and this little battery seems to settle around 13.1-ish, so I'm figuring without the alternator raising the voltage the little battery will feebly and unsuccessfully attempt to charge the Odyssey until the voltage matches. That is assuming I vaguely understand how that works, which I probably don't.
From what I read using a DC-DC charger is good as it regulates the charging process, particularly topping off, which might normally take a very long time off the alternator alone. In my case I may not get a 100% topped off battery, but that will be okay so long as I hook it up to my normal charger next time I am able.
One more question, is an 18ah battery enough for a jump start in a pinch? I didn't particularly intend to use it as a jump pack, but if it would that might be nice.
I'm using a 12v 18ah/20hours battery. Common size, inexpensive ($30) and easily replaceable, but also not a pain to haul around.
I intend to use it while camping / traveling, so if I'm in a situation where I don't have down time or handy access to 110AC for a while, I might run it down and want to re-charge it from the vehicle.
My vehicle battery is a 100ah/20hours Odyssey 2150.
I've been researching DC to DC charging, and to the best I can figure, I should be fine connecting it directly into my 12v DC port (I have a handy always hot one in my rear cargo hatch area) and I can charge my small battery from that while driving around.
One concern I have is that power port is not intended for heavy loads, can a low battery draw enough to be an issue? I think it is fused for 15amps but it runs the entire length of the vehicle on small wires, so if the battery can pull a large load attempting to charge that might not work. Without regulation I assume the battery will attempt to draw as much power as it's able to absorb, at higher charge that won't be much, but if it's low I'm not sure how much it can draw.
Since my port stays hot when I turn off the key I should probably unhook it if stopped for a while, as the different size batteries will probably be constantly trying to drain each other due to the mismatch. My Odyssey likes to settle to about 12.7v-ish, and this little battery seems to settle around 13.1-ish, so I'm figuring without the alternator raising the voltage the little battery will feebly and unsuccessfully attempt to charge the Odyssey until the voltage matches. That is assuming I vaguely understand how that works, which I probably don't.
From what I read using a DC-DC charger is good as it regulates the charging process, particularly topping off, which might normally take a very long time off the alternator alone. In my case I may not get a 100% topped off battery, but that will be okay so long as I hook it up to my normal charger next time I am able.
One more question, is an 18ah battery enough for a jump start in a pinch? I didn't particularly intend to use it as a jump pack, but if it would that might be nice.