I'm making electrical system upgrades and am now considering a new A/C shore charger. Mounted on the boat is probably original equipment. It's a "Professional Mariner" model Flyback 20-3. So it is a 20 amp charger with 3 positive posts. There are 2 - 4 AWG positive cables leading directly to the house bank and auxiliary bank and 1 - 4 AWG negative cable. I'd say it is about 35' to 40' round trip run. The manual's chart stops at 30' with 6 AWG so I'd say 4 AWG is reasonable. The charger has a standard setting for FLA batts and an alternate setting for "Gel Cell". The P.O. kept the boat on a mooring and never relied on shore power. He relied on higher output alternator and solar to keep the batts topped off.
My house bank is a pair of 4D AGM's installed in 2015 and the auxiliary is Grp 31 AGM also installed in 2015. I rely on shore power charging primarily (took the solar off the bimini due to the poor condition of the panels). I didn't have any issues with the original shore charger but I want to make an upgrade. I was confused about the pair of positive cables because the boat also had an echo charger (that I have now removed) but I suppose the echo charger was for the alternator and solar output. I removed the echo charger and installed Blue Sea ACR late last summer.
So now I'm choosing a Sterling PCU 12v charger but with constraints built in by the original system. It makes most sense to install the new charger in the same location as the original because the cables and A/C wiring are already in place. But the cable size is too light for a higher capacity charger and the way Catalina has these cables bundled where accessibility is seemingly impossible makes it unlikely that I will try to replace the cables.
I'm considering limiting the charger size to 20 amp (PCU 1220) but that seems light for the house bank capacity (400 ah roughly), which I'm not likely to reduce when i replace batteries eventually. I know that AGM batts like to be charged at the highest rate feasible. At just 10%, a 40 amp charger is needed ... I was thinking 50 or 60 amp. but the cable would be too small. Since I only need one lead to a distribution buss, I thought about combining the 2 positive cables but that still leaves the negative cable too small. Thoughts? I don't have a good mounting location near the batteries, which would seem the most logical solution. It would be relatively easy to route A/C wiring from the panel. But I just don't have an appealing spot for a charger on that side of the boat.
My house bank is a pair of 4D AGM's installed in 2015 and the auxiliary is Grp 31 AGM also installed in 2015. I rely on shore power charging primarily (took the solar off the bimini due to the poor condition of the panels). I didn't have any issues with the original shore charger but I want to make an upgrade. I was confused about the pair of positive cables because the boat also had an echo charger (that I have now removed) but I suppose the echo charger was for the alternator and solar output. I removed the echo charger and installed Blue Sea ACR late last summer.
So now I'm choosing a Sterling PCU 12v charger but with constraints built in by the original system. It makes most sense to install the new charger in the same location as the original because the cables and A/C wiring are already in place. But the cable size is too light for a higher capacity charger and the way Catalina has these cables bundled where accessibility is seemingly impossible makes it unlikely that I will try to replace the cables.
I'm considering limiting the charger size to 20 amp (PCU 1220) but that seems light for the house bank capacity (400 ah roughly), which I'm not likely to reduce when i replace batteries eventually. I know that AGM batts like to be charged at the highest rate feasible. At just 10%, a 40 amp charger is needed ... I was thinking 50 or 60 amp. but the cable would be too small. Since I only need one lead to a distribution buss, I thought about combining the 2 positive cables but that still leaves the negative cable too small. Thoughts? I don't have a good mounting location near the batteries, which would seem the most logical solution. It would be relatively easy to route A/C wiring from the panel. But I just don't have an appealing spot for a charger on that side of the boat.