On
Wild, the charger/inverter was originally installed way out in the sail locker on the port side. The start battery was under the vanity in the head, and the house batteries under the nav station seat. The shore power inlet was in the cockpit footwell next to the helm on the starboard side. This meant that incredible lengths of 2/0 (12VDC) and 10/3 (120VAC) cables wrapped all the way around the boat and back. Holy Voltage-Drop Batman!
I’ve since replaced the 3 AGM house batteries with 4 100 Ah LiFePO4. The 4th one is in the bottom of the hanging locker, just behind the nav station. Although with all the hysteria about BattleBorn batteries lately, I’ve been looking hard at putting two newer, bigger, smarter batteries in the seat, as per Felice, noted above. Just not ready to dump the current investment, absent any actual problems.
More recently, I’ve moved the charger/inverter into the hanging locker. I also fit the Victron Isolation Transformer in there. Along with the solar charge controllers and an ELCI and surge protector. Together, they almost fit.
Just outside the hanging locker, on the aft side of the bulkhead, I installed a Victron Lynx system, which contains main positive and negative busbars and fuses.
I may post some pictures later (preparing to get under way) but I still consider this a work in progress. Things I’m not entirely pleased with:
I ended up butchering the woodwork in the hanging locker more than intended. Although it was never much use for storage - I kept the extra PFDs in there. (Now where do they go?)
Routing all those 2/0 cables neatly in the hanging locker is harder than it looks. I can do better. Need to relocate the solar chargers. Again.
The Lynx shunt lasted approximately one hour before frying. Victron customer service is next to non-existent and just ghosted me when I asked for a replacement. They do not honor their warranty.
The Victron Isolation Transformer does not meet its specs, and will not work in Mexico where dock voltage is around 130VAC. Victron shuts down at 128VAC. So I have a messy bypass on it right now
It’s poor form to install grounded equipment in front of an AC panel within a certain distance. In residential construction, I think it’s supposed to be farther than arms-length. Of course, this isn’t really possible on a sailboat. In this case, I mean the AC isolation transformer and inverter/charger in the back of the locker and all the stuff mounted on the bulkhead, including the main DC busbar. When reaching into the locker, you almost can’t help pressing your shoulder against the lynx. If the covers were off, you could set up a nice little circuit running through your body. Not sure what to do about out it now except exercise extreme caution, but should have thought about it in the design phase. Also, don’t skip the chassis ground cables!