Hunter tech support is closed and my owners manual is in another state onboard my 2001 Hunter 450...maybe older and wiser can provide me a clue.
Considering upgrading to gel batteries for deep discharge/long life. Apparently they do very poorly with over-voltage charging (not over 14.1 volts according to Deka website). My hitachi 80 amp internally regulated alternator puts out a rock-steady 14.5 according to the Yanmar manual I saw online. My Xantrex inverter/charger has a nice gel batt charging regime but its schematics show the batteries hooked up only to it, and never mention the alternator. I have yet to be away from shore power overnight with this boat so everything is charged in the morning.
1. Will the alternator fry the gel house batts? How would it normally get there? I ignorantly supposed the alternator was distributed through the charger/inverter. What happens when the engine is running dockside with shore power hooked up? (the charger is auto-on with power applied).
2. Is there such a thing as an alternator that can be set to a given voltage? Or must I put it through a regulator? The three-stage regulator seems to be the ticket for gel batts.
Thanks for insight.
Dean M.
Considering upgrading to gel batteries for deep discharge/long life. Apparently they do very poorly with over-voltage charging (not over 14.1 volts according to Deka website). My hitachi 80 amp internally regulated alternator puts out a rock-steady 14.5 according to the Yanmar manual I saw online. My Xantrex inverter/charger has a nice gel batt charging regime but its schematics show the batteries hooked up only to it, and never mention the alternator. I have yet to be away from shore power overnight with this boat so everything is charged in the morning.
1. Will the alternator fry the gel house batts? How would it normally get there? I ignorantly supposed the alternator was distributed through the charger/inverter. What happens when the engine is running dockside with shore power hooked up? (the charger is auto-on with power applied).
2. Is there such a thing as an alternator that can be set to a given voltage? Or must I put it through a regulator? The three-stage regulator seems to be the ticket for gel batts.
Thanks for insight.
Dean M.