โMay-07-2015 10:19 AM
โMay-11-2015 08:42 AM
SoundGuy wrote:AH64ID wrote:
It's not nitpicking, it is providing the OP with actual fact based information about his question. One simply cannot charge a 50% SOC 12V G27 battery to full in 3 hours with a 10A charger, and leading the OP to believe that doesn't help his situation any.
Of course it's "nitpicking" ... who, other than the purists, said anything about a "full" recahrge? The OP apparently now has a set of 6 volt Trojans and an EU2000i to recharge them with, all he has to do is plug his trailer into the the genset, run it ~ 3 hrs each morning, and he'll have plenty of battery reserve to get him through another 24, 48 hrs of dry camping, even more depending on use ... he can leave "full" recharge to when he gets home. What's so complicated about that? :h
โMay-11-2015 08:40 AM
AH64ID wrote:
It's not nitpicking, it is providing the OP with actual fact based information about his question. One simply cannot charge a 50% SOC 12V G27 battery to full in 3 hours with a 10A charger, and leading the OP to believe that doesn't help his situation any.
โMay-11-2015 08:20 AM
dmullen wrote:BubbaChris wrote:
I'd suggest you keep it on the simple side for a single 8-day trip. You don't need to change out your existing converter, 3 stage is good for this first trip. Do as suggested multiple times, use your shore cord through an adapter into the EU2000i.
You can give the converter a small advantage by not turning on Eco mode on the Honda for at least the 1st hour of charging each day.
Once you get through this trip, you can geek out over the options while planning more boondocking. One of the options I didn't see mentioned is buying the 12V Honda charging cables and running them straight to your batteries rather than going through any converter. But again, you don't need to weigh the pros/cons of this option for your first relatively short trip.
Thanks for the tip on the ECO mode.
โMay-08-2015 01:06 PM
dmullen wrote:BubbaChris wrote:
I'd suggest you keep it on the simple side for a single 8-day trip. You don't need to change out your existing converter, 3 stage is good for this first trip. Do as suggested multiple times, use your shore cord through an adapter into the EU2000i.
You can give the converter a small advantage by not turning on Eco mode on the Honda for at least the 1st hour of charging each day.
Once you get through this trip, you can geek out over the options while planning more boondocking. One of the options I didn't see mentioned is buying the 12V Honda charging cables and running them straight to your batteries rather than going through any converter. But again, you don't need to weigh the pros/cons of this option for your first relatively short trip.
Thanks for the tip on the ECO mode.
โMay-08-2015 12:58 PM
BubbaChris wrote:
I'd suggest you keep it on the simple side for a single 8-day trip. You don't need to change out your existing converter, 3 stage is good for this first trip. Do as suggested multiple times, use your shore cord through an adapter into the EU2000i.
You can give the converter a small advantage by not turning on Eco mode on the Honda for at least the 1st hour of charging each day.
Once you get through this trip, you can geek out over the options while planning more boondocking. One of the options I didn't see mentioned is buying the 12V Honda charging cables and running them straight to your batteries rather than going through any converter. But again, you don't need to weigh the pros/cons of this option for your first relatively short trip.
โMay-08-2015 12:40 PM
โMay-08-2015 12:26 PM
โMay-08-2015 11:36 AM
jaycocreek wrote:
Instead of trying to nit~pik my post, why don't you address the opp and his question instead of taking this in another direction.
Contribute with your actual experiences on this topic would be nice and appreciated by the author.
โMay-08-2015 11:17 AM
โMay-08-2015 10:52 AM
jaycocreek wrote:It works for you and there is no disputing that but it's hard to recommenced something to others when you have no actual data of your own and the specifications are not even close to working as you described.
Okay, being exact, although I said "approximately" . What I found is exact and good to know for those that want to be exact in everything that they do! If "exactly" drained to 50% it will take 5 hours at 10 amps to be "exactly" 100% full.
I think 3~4 is close to 5 but hey.
โMay-08-2015 10:22 AM
It works for you and there is no disputing that but it's hard to recommenced something to others when you have no actual data of your own and the specifications are not even close to working as you described.
โMay-08-2015 09:25 AM
โMay-08-2015 09:15 AM
. You also haven't answered the question as to how you know the battery is at 100% SOC.
โMay-08-2015 09:02 AM
dmullen wrote:
I stayed at a Holiday Inn Express last night!