โApr-30-2016 05:21 PM
โMay-02-2016 11:37 AM
โMay-02-2016 10:56 AM
Mr.Mark wrote:
"Do most folks have a battery monitor to monitor the state of charge (SOC) of their house bank? "
Absolutely, we can monitor the state of charge on our battery bank (house and chassis) at a glance on the i-pad.
MM.
โMay-02-2016 10:46 AM
Mr.Mark wrote:
Absolutely, we can monitor the state of charge on our battery bank (house and chassis) at a glance on the i-pad.
MM.
โMay-02-2016 10:43 AM
โMay-02-2016 09:53 AM
โMay-02-2016 09:12 AM
Kayteg1 wrote:
What you might want to know, roof AC takes equivalent of 1 - 1.5 HP, so even with 3 of them, the 400HP + engine will never notice the load.
I am intrigued with 4 alternators though. My vintage conversion has single alternator, what I figure out is about 8,000W (it is in size of good bucket) and that alternator was build with passenger bus in mind, with lot of (incadescent) lights and gadgets.
What would make one putting 4 alternators?
โMay-02-2016 08:46 AM
timjet wrote:
OK, stupid question from someone who does not own a MH yet; How do you power a residential refrig when driving down the road. Large battery bank and inverter?? Surely you don't run the generator all the time.
โMay-02-2016 07:23 AM
โMay-02-2016 05:34 AM
timjet wrote:Mr.Mark wrote:
We don't have solar but have 3 Lithium Ion house batteries, 4 starting batteries for the engine (24 volt) and one battery for the generator. We have four 3,500 watt inverters, four alternators on the engine that will allow us to use four roof airs without the generator running going down the road.
MM.
Wow, Mr Mark you could power a small town. Just curious, on a hot day with all air conditioners running and climbing a hill do the alternators sap enough power to notice a lack of power to the wheels?
Anyway your post explains a lot. My boat has a similar configuration whereas the alternators will charge the house batts while underway. My boat refrig is DC/AC so no need for an inverter though I have one.
What I didn't know is if the current from the alternator could be directed to either or both the house and engine start batts. Sounds like it can. Is there a selector switch to direct this current?
โMay-02-2016 04:31 AM
Mr.Mark wrote:
We don't have solar but have 3 Lithium Ion house batteries, 4 starting batteries for the engine (24 volt) and one battery for the generator. We have four 3,500 watt inverters, four alternators on the engine that will allow us to use four roof airs without the generator running going down the road.
MM.
โMay-02-2016 03:39 AM
โMay-01-2016 03:56 PM
wa8yxm wrote:I thought about mentioning this but hesitated because I find that I rarely heat the coach while traveling. But when I travel in very cold weather, you are correct. It's great to have the coach heated by the, otherwise wasted, engine heat. As for hot water while we travel, I've found that we rarely ever use hot water while traveling.
... it also can "Burn" engine heat when you are on the road and pre-heat the engine before you leave in many cases., Very handy.
โMay-01-2016 03:44 PM
timjet wrote:Mr. Mark did a good job describing his setup. Mine is a little different. We have 16 coach batteries, 8 for the house and 8 dedicated to the refrigerator and kitchen air conditioner. There is a powerful alternator on the engine that charges the batteries en-route and 600 watts of solar on the roof that helps as well. The A/C can run a few hours off the battery alone but I've never measured the exact time. The generator can be set to turn on when the battery level gets low.
OK, stupid question from someone who does not own a MH yet; How do you power a residential refrig when driving down the road. Large battery bank and inverter?? Surely you don't run the generator all the time.
โMay-01-2016 03:28 PM
timjet wrote:
OK, stupid question from someone who does not own a MH yet; How do you power a residential refrig when driving down the road. Large battery bank and inverter?? Surely you don't run the generator all the time.