mlow wrote:Another solution would be both an AC-DC power supply to power equipment while there is grid power, the charger, and a transfer switch that switches over to using the batteries when the grid goes out. Otherwise the batteries are just sitting there being charged.
Can you tell me what kind of load you are running at one of your sites with a MinnKota charger? And does it permanently stay in float mode once the batteries are charged?
This person got back to me saying either DualPro or MinnKota chargers would be good for up to 2A per output, over that and the charger will reset itself requiring it to be rebooted.
Makes no sense to me really.
He's just trying to help me, but it's making the whole thing cost more.
EDIT: Just called DualPro: explanation: if there is a load accepting much more than 2 amp, it won't allow the charger's voltage to raise the way it would expect a battery to. It then presumes there's a battery fault, and sets a fault code, which kills the charger.
So yeah... calling MinnKota next :)
Yes that would be the Tripp Lite inverter/charger that we also use a lot and has been mentioned here before.
http://www.neweggbusiness.com/Product/P ... Hwod0X8Irg
But an AC site is less efficient and will not stay up as long as a DC site when power fails. All comes down to if you have grid and how often and long it fails.