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Battery Chargers
- smullis1961
- Scurvy Dog
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- Vessel Info: 36 Ft 1988 Carver Aft Cabin
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Battery Chargers
Thanks
Steve
- Cooler
- Admiral
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Twin 350XL Crusaders
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Re: Battery Chargers

( All weather people have to say this on air, near lakes )
- km1125
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Re: Battery Chargers
If you're just charging three batteries of the same configuration, then a three-bank charger is the way to go.
However, if you have a large house bank and then a couple of start batteries for the engines, it would be better to go with a two-bank dedicated to the engine start batteries (which can be a fairly small charger) and a separate dedicated charger for the house bank that is sized to appropriately recharge the house bank or run the loads on the house circuits.
Let's say you have 20A of typical loads on the house side while you're using the boat (at the dock, plugged into shore power). If you had a 30A three-bank charger to feed the house and two starting batteries, the house battery would actually be DISCHARGING the whole time, while there was a bunch of unused capacity tied to the starting batteries (because there's virtually no loads on them and you're just topping them up or replenishing what might be used from a bilge pump). That's a good example of where you might want just a 10A two-bank charger for the engine start batteries and a dedicated 30A charger for the house.
Each case can be different...just some things to consider.
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Re: Battery Chargers
I'm not quite following. Most good chargers these days will throw full output to any one bank at a time when needed. With a ProNautic 30 amp charger for example, it will direct full output (30 amps) to the house bank if the engine batteries are already topped up which is pretty typical as they're usually already at full charge after a run. So very little needed from the charger at the dock for the engine batteries, maybe a float charge at best but certainly not 10 amps, at least not for very long at all. With only two banks on board, the third output leg from the charger can maintain the generator battery at peak charge. Even with that, the output to the engines and genny would be minimum, leaving plenty for the house bank. Of course more is better in terms of keeping up with consumption at the dock but power management is key no matter how big the charger is.km1125 wrote:Source of the post.... Let's say you have 20A of typical loads on the house side while you're using the boat (at the dock, plugged into shore power). If you had a 30A three-bank charger to feed the house and two starting batteries, the house battery would actually be DISCHARGING the whole time, while there was a bunch of unused capacity tied to the starting batteries (because there's virtually no loads on them and you're just topping them up or replenishing what might be used from a bilge pump)....
- Midnightsun
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Re: Battery Chargers
See description at link. Boy have prices gone up. Paid around $350 in 2019.

This very nice and powerful charger will be pretty much overkill now with the Lithium house bank going in soon as it will have a dedicated 80a charger on it. The 1250P will now do the starting batteries, the thruster batteries, the generator battery.
- km1125
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Re: Battery Chargers
Viper wrote:I'm not quite following. Most good chargers these days will throw full output to any one bank at a time when needed. With a ProNautic 30 amp charger for example, it will direct full output (30 amps) to the house bank if the engine batteries are already topped up which is pretty typical as they're usually already at full charge after a run. So very little needed from the charger at the dock for the engine batteries, maybe a float charge at best but certainly not 10 amps, at least not for very long at all. With only two banks on board, the third output leg from the charger can maintain the generator battery at peak charge. Even with that, the output to the engines and genny would be minimum, leaving plenty for the house bank. Of course more is better in terms of keeping up with consumption at the dock but power management is key no matter how big the charger is.
The ProNautic chargers are like many "old school" chargers in that it is essentially one charger with three diode-isolated outputs. it does not monitor the three outputs individually, nor "directs" current to any one of the three. The current is drawn by the battery needing it most. All the charger does is regulate the output voltage based on a charge profile and the batteries really do the rest. In the OP's case, it would make a good replacement for his old one. If you buy the 40A version, any one of the outputs can be utilized up to 40A, or that 40A can be split among the 3 batteries.
Those chargers are different than, say, the NOCO Genius, the Guest ChargePro or the ProMariner ProSport chargers, which are also good chargers. These have true isolated outputs instead of just a diode-isolated output. One clue is whether the charger shares a negative connection for all the batteries or if there is a dedicated one for each battery. In these chargers, each output is essentially a separate charger. If you buy a 20A two-bank charger, you get two 10A chargers in one box. There is no "sharing" of the whole 20A output... you only get a max of 10A on any given output.
I could buy a Pronautic 40A charger and it could provide 40A on any of the three or four outputs, or I could buy a 40A Guest ChargePro but I'd only get a max of 10A out of any of the individual outputs. The "kicker" on these true-isolated units is that you could also tie two or more outputs together and "double up" the amps. Say you bought the 4 bank version but only had two banks, you could tie two of the outputs to each bank giving you 20A per bank, or with three batteries you could tie one each to batteries one and two, but two outputs to the third battery. The first two banks would get a maximum of 10A, but the third battery could get up to 20A. On true-isolated chargers, each output is monitored and voltage regulated independently.
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Re: Battery Chargers
Semantics I guess, we're basically saying the same thing with different Englishkm1125 wrote:Source of the postViper wrote:I'm not quite following. Most good chargers these days will throw full output to any one bank at a time when needed. With a ProNautic 30 amp charger for example, it will direct full output (30 amps) to the house bank if the engine batteries are already topped up which is pretty typical as they're usually already at full charge after a run. So very little needed from the charger at the dock for the engine batteries, maybe a float charge at best but certainly not 10 amps, at least not for very long at all. With only two banks on board, the third output leg from the charger can maintain the generator battery at peak charge. Even with that, the output to the engines and genny would be minimum, leaving plenty for the house bank. Of course more is better in terms of keeping up with consumption at the dock but power management is key no matter how big the charger is.
....The current is drawn by the battery needing it most. All the charger does is regulate the output voltage based on a charge profile and the batteries really do the rest.... In the OP's case, it would make a good replacement for his old one. If you buy the 40A version, any one of the outputs can be utilized up to 40A, or that 40A can be split among the 3 batteries......

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Re: Battery Chargers
- Midnightsun
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Re: Battery Chargers
Viper wrote:Source of the post BTW, I'm not a fan of a NOCO on a boat. They're not made for that IMO.
Well kick me then.

Problem with my boat is if on blocks or anywhere else for that matter you need 220v to get power on board and that means no way of charging the batteries. I installed this connected to all 4 banks in order to charge as required. I have a 110v recessed outlet beside my shore power connection which goes directly to the Noco so I can plug in to any 110v outlet and charge. Bottom line it is rarely used and never operational unless on the hard now and then.
Hmmm, need to update my photos as the picture there does not show the 110v inlet. Looks like this. https://no.co/gcp1
- bud37
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Re: Battery Chargers
Hans the noco is probably fine, it is just how they wire the grounding that may be an issue. But since you only use it for storage then have at it.....imo.
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