Rezarf <>< said:
Thanks guys, this is really giving me some good ideas.
I love the marine market, being a former Florida boy I am experienced in most things marine... and the marine market crosses over well into the off road enviroment.
Now, I have a few questions...
2. Mike, can you recharge off the vehicle battery in an emergency? I am not forseeing more than a 3-4 day self reliant trip with no services. Can your system hold a good charge that long? I am not trying to bring everything from the home with me on these trips, they are designed to get away from all the stuff, but the water pump, freezer fridge, and led lights are a non-negotiable to power up. Weekend long trips will be most typical.
Do you have a link to your charger?
!
Drew
I have two 105 AH batteries. Combined, they provide 210 AH (give or take). I use these for running accessories, but not power tools, winches or inverters. Consequently, they last a long time. LED lights and water pump are nothing. The fridge will draw more amps. Get the data on the draw on the fridge and decide what you need for the average trip.
In my truck, the starting battery is inviolate. I do not use it for anything but starting. said another way, I will not use the starting battery to keep the beer cold.
In a pinch, I could move the starting battery (group 31 Optima Yellowtop) to the trailer and use it, but hooking it to another discharged battery will simply result in two sub-parr batteries. The more likely scenariois that I have a problem with the starting battery, and jump form the trailer batts.
The charger I have is made by Guest. It is designed to intelligently charge and maintain a pair of batteries (two banks) in a boat. I do not remember the model name, but West Marine sells them for about $150 to $200 - less than a quality isolator, and I can leave it plugged in 7 X 24. My batteries are over four years old, and when I checked them today, they were just fine. If you think about it, you will realize that your trailer spends a lot more time parked than running behind your truck. This was the basis of my decision to go with the set-up I have. however, you COULD set it up so that the batts charge off both the vehicle and the 100V charger. You would b=need an isolator. The iring diagrams for this set up are available IIRC.
I have had the trailer in the field for trips of three weeks or more, and never run out of battery. But it could happen, and I'd be down to manual processes. Not a big hardship.
Mike