mr. jackson I am aware you mean well in your writing but the tone is often insulting, condescending and comes off as rude to other members. there is no need for this tone or behavior. if you really want to help other members please consider the tone of the writing before you press send. you post good links but your tone and demeanor are often hurtful. I don't believe you aware of how insulting you can appear to other members who know less than you. I think this is probably not your desire. please be nicer.Awr, or arrggghhh........
Perhaps I misunderstand the difficulty it seems some have with this process.
1. Know the LOAD in amps.
2. Know the distance of the wire coming and going - like, add them up.
3. Look up on a table or a chart in the 3% voltage drop. Either ADD another x% or go to the next wire size up to take into account the drops through the connections. The charts all show a "range" of sizes, amps and distances, so there is not only "one" specific answer to any given installation, but rather choices. If one is near the uppermost range of a given wire size selection, go for the next sized wire.
4. Look up the fuse size for that size wire.
The linked BlueSea website has, conveniently, the wire and fuse sizing on the same downloadable PDF file.
Skimping on the wire size is simply foolish.
Rant over.
I am so happy for you. Really. Sometimes it's challenging. That's why I prepared this following link years ago, to help people, because on forums like this we simply don't know what folks' backgrounds in real life are (I'm an engineer, and at first it was daunting, too ):No need to rant Stu old buddy. I have done all you suggested. I have a complete and thorough understanding of the process (thanks to all of my friends here). I'm just trying to install it right the first time. On the 310 the location of the charger really is quite silly. You really can't see the face of the charger to read all of the info it shows while charging. Plus it is so far from the batteries. If I can find a better location it would Be a great improvement. Thanks.
Power = Current times Voltage ("P = I x E" is how I remember it). In this case it's the AC side you look at: 110 V and a max of 7 A for the 40A charger. About 800 watts max, normally less. Still a reasonable heat source.If that location works I could use #6 according to the chart. How much heat would it add to the aft berth? We only use it for storage.
Bulk charging is a lot longer than most folks assume it is, if the voltage sensed by the charge equipment is correct. For example in the article linked to below the 100Ah battery was charged from 65% DOD at 50A or a charge rate of 50% of Ah capacity .5C. With correct voltage sensing the bulk duration at .5C was 50 minutes. When you consider that to attain .5C on a 400Ah bank would require a charge source cable of producing 200A for 50 minutes you can see how fast this battery was charged, and bulk still lasted 50 minutes. Without correct voltage sensing bulk only lasted 30 minutes and the battery never attained the absorption target voltage in the 1 hour mark.Curious.. you would get that sort of voltage drop for a 40 amp charger in bulk.. but when you get up near those float or maintenance voltage (where the drops really matter), isnt the current in the real world always much smaller than the bulk charging current? Ie, battery acceptance is limiting current at those highest voltage levels - so voltage drops are also going to be down when it really matters and you need to be accurate.
That seems long to me, but I've never really measured it. After running some battery sensor cables through the tubes under the head I'm thinking it would be pretty tough to replace the #4 charger cable I've got now with anything larger. Luckily I cheaped out and only got a 30A charger, so the #4 is ok.In the C-310 the battery charger is in the rear compartment on the bulkhead. The batteries are under the port settee, forward of the head. It is a reasonable straight run, but 21 feet is about right.
If you install an ACR at the same time you only need to run one positive and one negative, instead of two positives and one negative. That may make it easier. Maine Sail has some real good information on the ACR, as well as how to change the 1/2/Both switch so it selects the bank for usage, but charging always happens to both banks automatically.Yes I think the #2 wire for my 40 amp may be tough to get thru the conduit. I can verify the length is 21' of the old #10 I removed.
Neal, congratulations! Two questions: are you strapping down the batteries, and is there a tray under them?Well... it's finished. Thanks to all who put up with my questions and especially those who overlooked my slow learning pace and kept offering advice. All seems to be working properly and tonight I will not dream of wire size, voltage drop, and house load... thanks again.
Neal