I guess you didn't get the answer you wanted Nodak (multiple times) but I wanted to comment on the response below.
Don you gave the answer in the first post. Should we all have re-stated what you had already said?
The rest of us gave advice on how best to utilize his EU1000 to charge a battery bank cause you already answered the question. The EU1000 can do 900 watts continuous / 7.5 amps continuous output. Therefore any battery charger drawing less than about 7 amps AC will be fine for use on the EU1000.
A 30 amp battery charger, such as the
Iota 30A, does not use 30 amps from a generator it will use roughly 7 amps from the AC side, and output up to 30 amps of DC charge current on the DC side. An AC charger using less than 7 amps AC should be fine on the EU1000.
I would look for one in the 20-25 amp category for use with the your generator and this will charge your bank just fine..
One word of caution on many "multi-bank" chargers is that you do NOT always get the face value output ratings.
For example a 20 amp 2 bank charger from Guest may actually be two outputs of just 10 amps each. This means if you have a house battery that needs 20A it will not get it and will only see 10 amps max and you have not really bought a true 20A charger.
Often times the starting battery is at or near 100% state of chage and can't even take .5A so you would have 9.5A wasted in the above scenario. Read the manuals before you buy. You ideally want a good multi-stage charger with a float voltage setting, if you also plan to use this dock side. If using just off the generator no real worries as you'll likely never run it long enough to get back to 100% state of charge anyway which is when the float mode would kick in.