I've had the same question. And last winter I left the batteries on board and the charging system in place. (A 65w panel with a Morningstar Duo controller feeding a pair of Walmart grp 27's for the mains and a single grp 27 for reserve. ) the charger feeds the batteries directly so the boat's DC system is off.
Water loss was minimal over the winter and the batteries were fully charged at all times. The controller seems to be doing the proper job of monitoring and maintaining the batteries.
This also meant that I had lights and a working stove for occasional visits and project puttering over the winter. Just hit the disconnect switch and we are back in action. This also avoided the contortions and inevitable busted knuckles of removing the batteries.
I'll do it again this year.
Can we get any engineering arguments not too?
Water loss was minimal over the winter and the batteries were fully charged at all times. The controller seems to be doing the proper job of monitoring and maintaining the batteries.
This also meant that I had lights and a working stove for occasional visits and project puttering over the winter. Just hit the disconnect switch and we are back in action. This also avoided the contortions and inevitable busted knuckles of removing the batteries.
I'll do it again this year.
Can we get any engineering arguments not too?