Thanks, Martin. I have a few more questions after reading your posts and a few videos.
1. I like having the emergency parallel switch in the event I ever had a dead starter battery and needed to start off the house. (I have an R29 with the Volvo D4.). Is that a reason to get the dual use battery? Or could I still parallel a traditional lifepo4 to start in an emergency?
2. As noted above, I’m contemplating a second AC battery charger for the starter/thruster (and would use the kisae inverter/charger for the lithium house). But after reading how the Victron dc-dc charger uses a voltage reading to detect whether to charge, I think it wont be able to distinguish between the alternator (when I want it on) and the ac charger (when I want it off). How do you keep the dc-dc from charging when on shore power?
3. Why didn’t you keep the ACR from engine to thruster on your setup and replace with another dc-dc given both batteries are AGM?
1) This is where shopping for a LFP battery one should look beyond the price. Some LFP batteries are only rated to 100 amps of continuous load, and aren't recommended to ever be used for emergency engine starting. The Lithionics battery I have supports 150amps continuous to a max of 230 amps, and can be used to emergency start my engine. (1200 amps for 1 second). The answer to your question is dependent on the LFP battery you choose. The 320ah Li3 battery I selected was about 1/3 more expensive than similar in a Dakota battery at the time. I'm also a cold weather boater so being able to charge LFP below freezing temperatures was important to me. The Li3 battery has a thermal blanket allowing it to operate normally down to -4 degrees F. A lot of LFP batteries don't have this feature. Names like "dual-purpose" to me are marketing, just my opinion. I look at the spec sheets of the LFP to determine if the battery will do what I need it to. Lithionics doesn't refer to my Li3 battery as anything other than a 320ah LFP battery.
2) It's not uncommon for LFP installs to have 2 battery chargers. The Orion-TR's have a config for detecting engine charging. It is possible for the 20amp battery charger to look like engine charging and thus, I get 20amps from the engine battery charger to house via the Orion-TR, plus another 60 amps from the dedicated house battery charger. I like that as I can sometimes get almost 80 amps of charging. Or, using the Victron app, I can connect to the Orion-TR and disable house charging via the app.
I kept the factory installed 20 amp battery charger, disconnected it from the house, renamed it "Engine/Thruster charger". Then I installed a second dedicated 60 amp Kisae battery charger dedicated to the LFP house battery bank.
Ultimately, I'd like to run an ignition wire back to the cockpit and wire the Orion-TR's such that the ignition wire will turn them on and off with the engine. But with the Orion-TR's auto-sensing engine charging voltage, it's not really necessary.
An advantage of LFP is quick charging. The 320ah Li3 battery supports charging up to 200 amps. There's just no way I can come close to leveraging this feature even if I ran both battery chargers, got 400 watts of sunshine, and idled the engine at the dock with a high RPM. Theoretically, I can get to 120 amps for charging. Realistically, I can get to about 90amps.
3) I love this question.
🙂 Why did I not keep the ACR for the engine to thruster, and instead, installed a second Orion-TR DC to DC charger for the Thruster?
I like to cruise off-grid and I want redundancy if I can get it. If my Engine to House Orion-TR were to fail, with a flat head screwdriver I can move one 6awg wire from the Engine to House Orion-TR over to the Engine to Thruster Orion-TR. I left myself enough slack in the wire for this. That would eliminate engine charging of my thruster bank and would restore my engine to house charging. I can live without my thruster battery being charged. I really don't want to go without engine charging. The 15 amps of engine charging that I get may not seem like a lot to rate such importance. But consider our SE Alaska trip which had an enormous amount of off-grid cruising. We would run for 6-8 hours a day. That's about 90-120 amp-hours a day from engine charging and we usually consume about 120ah daily. That makes solar a bonus, which gets me enough left over for hot water.
However...
I can charge the thruster battery with the 20 amp battery charger off the inverter. I would disable charging via the Victron app for the Engine to House Orion-TR, and let the 20 amp battery charger charge my thruster bank off the LFP house bank. It's unlikely I ever would since the bow thruster is not mission critical, but Engine to House charging is. I really like the two battery charger setup as I it gives me flexibility.
These are all fantastic questions and a great discussion. I filmed a video tech-talk all about my LFP setup now that I've had it for 3 seasons. How's it working? Am I happy with it? How is my setup different from the factory setup? The video is uploaded to YouTube and scheduled to be published this coming Tuesday