Bpwicks":27ssdaqh said:
When I recently had the water heater replaced, I was informed that the water heater is electrically connected to all the heater to be powered by the house batteries/alternator. The repair guys said I should NOT do this at the current draw from the heater would put too much strain on the alternator and might burn it out.
Is this accurate advice?
Thanks,
Brian
Brian, as others have stated it depends on the model year of the boat. In our case we have a 2014 R27 that has only a single bank of breakers for 120AC all of which are available to be powered by the inverter when the rotary switch is set to inverter. We have a 1500W inverter and a 1500W water heater. In short, it is possible, but risky, on our boat to heat the hot water with the inverter.
First, the only scenario where it makes sense is if you are docked or anchored with no shore power for multiple days. As Kenny states, the engine will heat the hot water if you drive any significant distance and it will stay warm for at least overnight. Running the engine in neutral without a load however does not create enough engine heat to heat the hot water for a long time. Here is how I do it when and if I’m in this rare situation.
First, I close the coolant lines in the engine bay that run to the helm cabin heater and the hot water tank. The reason is the engine is cold. If you start the engine with the coolant lines open you will first immediately cool the remaining heat in the water heater. Not what you want.
Second, start the engine. This is necessary to not draw the house battery bank down. At 1500W the heater can draw as much as 125 amps! I have a Volvo D3-200 that puts out 180 charging amps running the battery down is not a problem if the engine is running. The battery even gets some positive charge while heating the water!
Third, turn off ALL AC breakers. If the inverter is run with anything other than the water heater it will blow the internal fuses or potentially damage the inverter. Once all are off, start the inverter and once voltage is available on the AC panel the turn on only the water heater. Monitor the inverter meter to make sure it is doing OK. If all OK the water heater should heat up fairly quickly. If the water was even a little warm it should be hot within about 15 minutes. With the heavy alternator load the engine will also warm up more quickly. Once the engine temp is above 130 degrees or so the coolant valves can be opened to allow the engine to provide additional heat. The water should be piping hot very quickly after this if not already.
Of course I take no responsibility for any ill effects from this process. I can only say it works for me on our boat. Worst case scenario, I change the inverter internal fuses or buy a new (bigger) inverter. I can’t see how this would harm the alternator.
Curt