bobhenry wrote:While not exactly a tiny trailer wiring adventure I must admit you sir are an artist when it comes to correctly routing and forming the circuits. Any builder could take a lesson that a bit of care makes a wiring job , what ever it is, go so much smoother.
tony.latham wrote:That's some serious brewing going on there...![]()
Your trailer chassis lights (tail lights) and your 12V cabin/galley wireing are two different critters (systems). The chassis wiring should only be hot when it's plugged into your running tow vehicle and the appropriate switch is flipped (brakes, blinkers or headlight).
I'd suggest a fuse box like this to protect your 12V cabin system. A ten or twelve gauge negative and positive will come off your teardrop battery and then fourteen gauge neg/pos to your lights and fan:
http://www.amazon.com/Blue-Sea-Systems- ... ne+fusebox
Your Fantastic Fan will pull about 2.5 amps. I think LED lights draw about .25 amps per hour. So lets say you read for a couple of hours with the lights on, and run your fan during the same time period. That's about 6 amps. A Group 24 marine battery has about 40 useable amp hours. So in theory, at that rate you can go hang in the woods for a week without charging your battery.
As you've probably figured out, a properly wired tow vehilce will charge your battery coming and going. Thus if your on a trip... you'll start each night with a charged battery.
For me, an aditional 120v charger isn't needed. I do have an always-on 20 watt solor panel on my tongue box that maintains the battery and then some (along with a sixty watt folding panel inside the box that I find I seldom need).
Tony
Shadow Catcher wrote:An alternative to the Fantastic fan (which many folk try to slow down) is to use computer case fans which use much less power and do the job. I used two Antec 80mm three speed fans, seldom do we use them above low or medium.
pchast wrote:Since I'm also using Solar primarily, we wired from the same ignition controlled continuous solenoid set up
to a connector for the trailer. From there I used a Solar Charge Controller to control the battery charge.
H.A. wrote:But one thing may be of concern & it probably varies with different charging control models / manufacturers.
The 'alternate' DC input may have to be very clean no ripple, filtered DC. It may be a good idea to check this alternate source is clean or place a suitable filter on the controller input for good measure.
capnTelescope wrote:H.A. wrote:'Scuse the thread hijack, Scott. Are you thoroughly confused yet?![]()
capnTelescope wrote:pchast wrote:Since I'm also using Solar primarily, we wired from the same ignition controlled continuous solenoid set up
to a connector for the trailer. From there I used a Solar Charge Controller to control the battery charge.
That's interesting. So a solar charge controller will handle any 12-voltish DC input? Sounds like a SCC could replace the smart charger in my setup and eliminate the inverter. You could add another relay on the trailer side of my circuit and have 3-way charging: Shore power, DC-AC-DC or basking in the sun.
bobhenry wrote:While not exactly a tiny trailer wiring adventure I must admit you sir are an artist when it comes to correctly routing and forming the circuits. Any builder could take a lesson that a bit of care makes a wiring job , what ever it is, go so much smoother.
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