Belt sizing, storage vs production and other stuff
Hi Scott B
GC batteries work great, you will be very happy with them provided you can keep them charged.
You really can't design an electrical system by picking stuff that feels good however. The production-storage-use must be balanced
If they are standard Trojan batteries you will get 410 AH which will provide 205 AH MAX if you want to have them last more than a season or two. The more deeply you discharge a battery the fewer number of charge-discharge cycles you can get out of it before it dies. The number take an alarming turn around 40% discharged so I would not use 50% as a design value. As a "weekend cruiser" you should be able to get the batteries completely charged during the week and then draw them down on the cruise. Long time cruisers are not so lucky and most will cycle between 60-90% charged. This is yet another reason to tie all (less start) your batteries together into one big house bank. If you already have a start battery then you certainly don't what to have 2 house banks. One big bank will be discharged half what two smaller banks will.
How much motoring (hours) do you do on an ideal (sail out and back assumed) weekend?
That is one of the things that is going to drive your alternator sizing. You want to be able to charge the batteries to 90ish% with normal engine use if you can. this simplifies the whole charging regime and you get your motor working doing something besides supplying 5 HP to the alternator.
Charging to 90% may or may not be possible because of the loads you put on the boat while sailing or on the hook. I have a spreadsheet that takes the math out of it that I find very handy for just such purposes.
Once you have the loads down you may find that you, for instance, can run the microwave for dinner while motoring up the the final anchorage vs running the microwave after you anchor and save a lot of battery charging.
The order of things does matter in small systems where storage is the primary source of power. The spreadsheet allows you to play with when you charge also.
All this, and the battery acceptance of charge..... stuff that has already been talked about in the thread, has to factor in to get a happy boat.
Then you can go an pick components that make sense for YOU. If you do a lot of motoring then you can reduce the size of your alternator and battery bank. If you have lots of fe-mal-ees with 1000 watt hair power tools then you are going to have to have a more robust system no matter how you motor. The possibilities go on and on and only you will be able to figure out the answer.
So, figure out the weekend electrical load and charge plan then determine the size battery bank that will support that without breaking the batteries or the budget.
email me for the spreadsheet. It is free and comes with instructions.
william-roosa@us.army.mil