Pearl":1tj8hel6 said:
I purchased the boat used and the inverter was already installed. The inverter is tied to the AC batteries, the inverter is a Cobra 1500 watts and is located above the refrigerator. I installed new 12v type 24 deep cycle batteries and changed the cable from #4 AWG to #2 AWG last year. It helped some, but still the low voltage alarm occurs when making coffee. Can I install 2 6v batteries in a series and still use the AC? Sounds like I also need to increase the wiring size again. Thank you
Hello Pearl,
Some basic calculations will help determine proper wire size.
1500Watts Inverter at 120 VAC results in 12.5 Amps current. BUT, that's 12.5A at 120VAC; the inverter makes that from 12VDC which will require 10X the amps (120/12 = 10); thus the wires connecting the batteries to the inverter will need to comfortably carry 120 AMPs. The next critical calc is dependent upon the LENGTH of the wires between the batteries and the inverter. You said 20 feet in your first post; does that include the length of BOTH (hot AND ground) conductors? That's important at 120Amps because you will go UP wire sizes between 25, 30, 40 feet.
Check bluesea.com. They have TONS of support info including a "Circuit Wizard" wherein you enter pertinent info then it calculates the appropriate wire sizes based upon the level of voltage drop you select as acceptable. For this application you should plan on 3% voltage drop (NOT 10%).
Anyway, I'd go with 2/0 wire. Bigger if more than 20' TOTAL run length.
So you can see why putting the batteries and inverter CLOSE together is a good thing. Carrying AC current is easy from a wire size standpoint but carrying HIGH AMPERAGE DC is much more costly from a wire-size standpoint.
One other thing. Those wires connecting the batteries to the inverter MUST be Fused. Place the fuse CLOSE to the batteries; do not rely on the "circuit protection" built into the inverter. When there is a malfunction or, God-forbid, a dead short, those wires will get HOT and cause a nasty fire which would be prevented by proper fuse protection.
Something like the Blue Sea MRBF which incorporates a fuze into the battery terminal connection. Very slick.
Fair Winds,
/david