1980Coronado
Senior Chief Petty Officer
- Joined
- Oct 8, 2010
- Messages
- 699
Looking for innovative ideas and suggestions for charging the battery used to run a 12V boat lift drive motor.
I have a Shore Station lift for my Coronado and I recently purchased a Lift-Tech Marine 12V motor for it. The lift sits at the in-laws lake house and my father in-law didn't want to run AC power out on the dock, so we opted for the 12V system. Obviously this requires a 12V battery to operate it. There are two possible ways to hook this thing up, 3 if you put a second battery in the boat.
1.) Operate it off of a stand alone battery hanging under the lift canopy
2.) Operate it off of the boat battery
3.) Operate it off of a second battery in the boat (would have to install second battery)
The questions I have are:
1.) Which way to hook it up (1,2, or 3 above)?
2.) How to charge the battery?
Charging Methods:
1.) Install a 20 Watt solar panel kit available for about $360 that attaches directly the lift. (10 watt kit not enough charging capacity to keep up with a heavy boat and multiple uses over a weekend)
pros:
- don't need to drain the boat battery to lift with
- totally self contained unit with no power cords on the dock
cons:
- father in-law may not like the looks of a solar panel hanging off the lift
- solar panel could be damaged in a storm.
- 20 watts isn't a lot of charge capacity (1.6 amps max)
2.) Use the boat battery
pros:
- no solar panel or battery to hang on the lift
- no solar panel to get damaged
cons:
- could be hard on the boat battery
- have to hook it up every time you come in
3.) Install a second battery in the boat
pros:
- don't have to use the same battery to run the boat and run the lift
- no Solar panels to buy
cons:
- don't know how to charge it
- you have to hook it up every time you come in
Anyone have suggestions....or another way?
I have a Shore Station lift for my Coronado and I recently purchased a Lift-Tech Marine 12V motor for it. The lift sits at the in-laws lake house and my father in-law didn't want to run AC power out on the dock, so we opted for the 12V system. Obviously this requires a 12V battery to operate it. There are two possible ways to hook this thing up, 3 if you put a second battery in the boat.
1.) Operate it off of a stand alone battery hanging under the lift canopy
2.) Operate it off of the boat battery
3.) Operate it off of a second battery in the boat (would have to install second battery)
The questions I have are:
1.) Which way to hook it up (1,2, or 3 above)?
2.) How to charge the battery?
Charging Methods:
1.) Install a 20 Watt solar panel kit available for about $360 that attaches directly the lift. (10 watt kit not enough charging capacity to keep up with a heavy boat and multiple uses over a weekend)
pros:
- don't need to drain the boat battery to lift with
- totally self contained unit with no power cords on the dock
cons:
- father in-law may not like the looks of a solar panel hanging off the lift
- solar panel could be damaged in a storm.
- 20 watts isn't a lot of charge capacity (1.6 amps max)
2.) Use the boat battery
pros:
- no solar panel or battery to hang on the lift
- no solar panel to get damaged
cons:
- could be hard on the boat battery
- have to hook it up every time you come in
3.) Install a second battery in the boat
pros:
- don't have to use the same battery to run the boat and run the lift
- no Solar panels to buy
cons:
- don't know how to charge it
- you have to hook it up every time you come in
Anyone have suggestions....or another way?