I'm installing a Nextgen 5.5 Kw Genset in my Hunter 40.5. Just about done with the installation and now have to decide which battery bank to use for starting the GENSET. Do I start the Genset from the House Bank or from the Engine Start Battery? Advantages/Disadvantages. Would it be better to get a separate small Generator Starting Battery? If so how would I keep it charged?
Right now I don't have a Off 1 2 Combine type battery switch. There is an On/Off for the House Bank and a separate On/Off for the Start Battery with a Blue Sea Battery Link ACR to handle charging the Start Battery.
Which battery do you use and why? Am I overthinking this one?
Thanks in advance
Really there is no right or wrong way here. If practicing good battery management (never letting the house bank dip below 12.0-12.1V during average house loads) then starting the gen off the house banks will work perfectly fine. A
properly sized house bank for a 40 foot boat (400Ah plus) will have more cranking ability than a single starting battery even when it is at 50% DOD.
If you are not practicing good house bank management, meaning no well calibrated Ah counter, Smart Gauge or accurate voltage measurement, then starting of the start battery would generally be preferred.
If the choice comes down to adding more lead to the boat then I usually prefer to see this weight put into the house bank where it can actually do something other then sit there as a second bank (third bank in total) of
dead lead or 98% unused weight. It will take less than .5Ah of battery capacity (often less than that) to start a gen set this means approx 99.5% of that weight is being carried around never being adequately put to good use.
If you use dedicated start and house banks the starting bank sees very little use from starting the engine so the usual approach would be to tag the genset onto the starting bank. On boats over 45' then perhaps a third bank could be feasible but we then often get into bow banks too so I still generally use the engine bank for gen set rather than having three banks of "
dead lead" and one house bank where the capacity is actually
used...
If you choose to use the start bank for starting both engine & generator you will want a way to:
Isolate HOUSE bank entirely
Isolate START bank entirely
Start and draw house loads from START bank
Start and draw house loads from HOUSE bank
In other words a three switch system where one ON/OFF is START, one ON/OFF is HOUSE and one ON/OFF is EMERGENCY PARALLEL. Emergency parallel needs to be correctly wired to the
load side of the switches and it is most often incorrectly wired to the battery side....