PotatoAddict
Cadet
- Joined
- Mar 9, 2012
- Messages
- 12
Hi all. How do you manage to stay powered when you're away from shore power and you're at sea, at anchor, at a mooring, etc.?
I made my first trip to Catalina Island and moored at Avalon Harbor for 3 nights. It was a lot of fun. However, a major concern of mine was battery power. I have lots of appliances that relied on them: 3 refrigerators, lights, stereo, TV, etc. My boat has 2 x group 29s (house, port engine) and 1 x group 29 plus 1 x group 27 (starboard engine, generator).
I do have a generator and I ran that a couple of hours a day while cooking and showering (for the hot water heater). I also figured the 30 amp battery charger would also have the opportunity to recharge the batteries a bit. However, during the last day, my batteries were really running low: the lights got dimmer, etc. Apparently 2 hours a day of generator usage was not enough to keep my batteries up to charge. Should I have let it run longer? Or perhaps is my 30 amp battery charger just too slow/weak? Would have running both engines at idle and allowing the alternators been better (they're both rated at 65 amps each, but I know that at idle the output is less, plus I'm concerned about adding extra hours to the engines).
What would you have done and how do you manage to keep your own vessel powered? Thanks for your thoughts!
I made my first trip to Catalina Island and moored at Avalon Harbor for 3 nights. It was a lot of fun. However, a major concern of mine was battery power. I have lots of appliances that relied on them: 3 refrigerators, lights, stereo, TV, etc. My boat has 2 x group 29s (house, port engine) and 1 x group 29 plus 1 x group 27 (starboard engine, generator).
I do have a generator and I ran that a couple of hours a day while cooking and showering (for the hot water heater). I also figured the 30 amp battery charger would also have the opportunity to recharge the batteries a bit. However, during the last day, my batteries were really running low: the lights got dimmer, etc. Apparently 2 hours a day of generator usage was not enough to keep my batteries up to charge. Should I have let it run longer? Or perhaps is my 30 amp battery charger just too slow/weak? Would have running both engines at idle and allowing the alternators been better (they're both rated at 65 amps each, but I know that at idle the output is less, plus I'm concerned about adding extra hours to the engines).
What would you have done and how do you manage to keep your own vessel powered? Thanks for your thoughts!