First - let me say that I am in awe of what is posted on this forum. My god!! You guys are awesome. I have skimmed through all the reading material - I will go back and look at it much more closely here over the next week or so as there is a lot of good info in there. As a result of what I have read so far - I have made some decisions about what to do. However, I still have some questions - and I know they may be answered in the standard reading material - but I want to ask some anyway to help me get started. I hope I'm not too lame.
So - I am building a camping/cargo trailer and I want it to have some electrical functions. I've done some research, come to some preliminary conclusions and I want to check my results and get some info from people in the know. It has been a while since General Physics II, so please bear with me (:
First - information about my tow vehicle. I have a 2007 Jeep Wrangler Unlimited Sahara. It came from the factory with a tow package, including a 4 pin adapter. Because my existing trailer has a 6 pin, I modified the Jeep to have a 4 pin and a 6 pin adapter (although 2 of the pins on the 6 pin are not connected to anything). However, I want the full enchilada for this tow trailer, I went ahead and got the pricey Mopar 7 pin adapter kit that plugs into the brake lights and has additional leads for the battery (+|-) and blue cable for the electric brake controller. I have a question about how this works to charge the batteries in the trailer. I have verified with my multimeter that the positive pin on the 7 pin adapter is hot, even with the engine off. My questions here are:
a). My understanding is that SOMEWHERE there is a diode that prevents juice from the trailer from flowing back to the Jeep. Is this a standard thing? Is this part of the 7-pin kit, or does the jeep already have it or what? Details, please. Second part of this - if I hook up a hot wire to the 6 pin adapter I put on the Jeep already, does it also have this diode and offer the same protection, or do I need to put one in-line, or what?
b). My understanding is that the purpose of this hot wire is to charge up the trailer batteries when the Jeep is rolling along. However, I've been told that the current flowing through this wire is just a trickle and doesn't really do a whole lot for charging up batteries. Is this true? If it is, then why bother with it at all? Looking at the wire in the 7-pin harness, it looks to be about a 12ga wire - nothing too special. Some have told me that if I want to do things right, to run a real cable, like a winch power cable, from the Jeep's battery to the trailer, to get high current flow. Your thoughts? FWIW, I will probably run high amp cables from the battery to the back bumper anyway, just so I can hook up a hitch-mounted winch back there if necessary. I wasn't planning on doing that soon, but if it will be helpful for my trailer stuff - I need to know (:
c). I have verified with my multi-meter that this hot pin is hot, even when the Jeep is off. Anything connected to it is going to suck power when the Jeep is off. So, with this 7-pin config, do I need to connect this hot wire to a battery isolator in the trailer, which is then connected to the trailer batteries, so that I do not run the Jeep dry?
Second - my understanding of the trailer electrical universe is:
Trailer's tail/stop/turn/reverse/marker lights will be powered from the Jeep. When the Jeep's come on, the trailer's will come on.
Trailer's electric brakes will be powered from the Jeep.
Everything else on the trailer will be powered by the trailer's batteries.
Third - DC power vs AC power. I had planned on putting an inverter in the trailer's electrical system, so that I could run a few standard electric things if needed - but people have been telling me I would be better off using an inverter directly with the Jeep if needed, and use its battery, rather than the trailer's battery. Does this make sense to anyone? I fail to see the logic here.
Fourth - my camping electrical needs are pretty modest. I am not building something to sleep in. I am building a camping cargo trailer - much like an AT Horizon (http://www.adventuretrailers.com/horizon.html). Its purpose is to give me some cargo security when camping with a soft top Jeep, allow me to carry more stuff, and reduce the overhead hassle of packing/unpacking camping gear (I can leave it in the trailer ready to go). I could unload everything and sleep in it if I really had to for some reason, or I could sleep on top of it - but that's not really its purpose. It's a cargo trailer (:
So, I do not anticipate using any fridges, microwaves, TVs or any of that kind of stuff. I'm really more interested in things like having some cargo bay lights so I can see when loading/unloading something from the trailer, being able to light up my camp site so I can see what I am doing, running a 12v air pump of some kind (inflatable kyack or something), running the wife's hair dryer or coffee pot, charging up a laptop or digital camera, iPod, maybe running wife's blender (margaritas), and other such stuff. I suppose it might be nice to run a heater of some kind into my tent, but there are propane solutions for that kind of thing. Pretty easy to throw another propane bottle in the trailer if needed. I might go camping in a hot spot one day - maybe - are there propane based A/C units for a tent? (: Anyway - my electrical needs are fairly modest I think. However, I would like to be able to be off-grid for 2 weeks at a time - completely self-sustaining - so I need to make sure whatever system I end up with can usually go the distance.
So - given all of that - some questions/issues are:
1). I had a question about 12v or 24v - but I see now that the answer for me is a 12v system - unless someone can convince me otherwise.
2). Inverters - so, I know that to live my dream here, I need an inverter. I know there are the sine wave ones and the square wave ones - and that the sine wave ones are twice as much and up (everything else being equal). Research seems to indicate that for my purpose, the square wave ones are fine. One question I have is how much to buy? Is 1000w enough? Is 2000w overkill? Maybe 500w is enough. I know it depends on what I am using at any particular time - but assuming the electrical use is really more in the "support" category rather than the "I can't go camping unless I have all the comforts of home category" - what do you think? Anything else I should know about inverters? What about the install in Jeep vs. Trailer question? What if I might want to run some 20A VAC power tools on occasion, like a chop saw or table saw? Does that change the picture at all?
3). I had been thinking of an Optima Yellowtop or Bluetop - but battery store says they are really low amp-hour batteries and that I would be better off with a pair of 6v golf car batteries. Space is not a problem for me - I can fit 4 of these golf cart batteries if I want to. My current thought is to start with 2 of them in series and design my trailer to take 2 more in parallel, so that I can easily add them later if needed. That would give me a nice 12v system, with decent amp-hours. Thoughts/comments on this approach?
4). I plan to have a master on/off switch for the trailer electrical. If I do go with 2 6 volt golf cart batteries, and want to add two later, should I use a selector switch so that I can go with batteries 1+2 (12v), 3+4 (12v), or 1+2+3+4 (24v)?? I've read some things like putting it in 24 volt mode can be good if you are connected to hard-line power and charging up. Any thoughts here? I realize that if I put it into 24v mode, I need to not use any of my power, since it will all be 12v rated stuff.
5). If my understanding of the battery isolator is correct, then I will be using one, so that I can isolate the Jeep's battery (via the charging pin) from the trailer system, so that if I manage to drain the trailer's batteries, I don't whack the Jeep next. Is this going to introduce conflict with the battery selector switch and/or solar panel (keep reading), or anything else I'm doing? Thoughts? Anything I should know?
6). I'm planning on having something in the way of a switch panel for the trailer. It will have switches to turn on/off various lights or things on the trailer, a volt meter, maybe an ammeter (is an ammeter a complete waste of my time here?), a remote panel (on/off) for the inverter (I've seen them out there), and maybe some other things. I'll also have a fuse box for a few things. Any thoughts for useful things to add?
7). I've considered the addition of an "unbreakable" solar panel - either permanently mounted to the top of the trailer, or stored and deployed as necessary. I know I need a charge controller so that it doesn't overcharge the batteries, but does the use of a switch selectable 12v/24v system conflict with this idea in some way? I am thinking of "plumbing" for a solar charger up front, but I will probably not add it until later. Anything I need to know here?
8). I might want to power an air compressor off this system - to maybe pump up a tire, or inflate one of those inflatable kayaks or rafts or something. Is that going to be too much load for the scope of what I'm talking about here? Should I just stick with the little 12v ones rather than using a regular one via an inverter?
9). I figure a good electrical system in this trailer is better than hauling along a generator (which I'd have to buy) of some kind. If I am saving money on a generator, it can be reasonable to spend more on the electrical system for the trailer. Although, eventually, I am sure I will buy a generator.
10). I want to end up with what meets my needs - but I don't want to blow more money that I need to either. This trailer is already over budget. It's likely that something like the solar panel is something that I would add later - but I want it to be easy to do that later too. I'll probably add a second set of golf cart batteries too - and I want to make that easy in the future.
11). Any chance of running power tools, such as table saw, chop saw, etc. off such a system? They all seem to pull 20A of 110VAC. Could be useful for cabin building.
12). What do I need to know about making the trailer so can I charge up the batteries via "shore" power at an RV site, or at home or what not? I know they use a 30A or 50A power line, but what else should I know here - in terms of how it inputs into my electrical system, dangers, tips, etc.?
I think that's about it. Hope to get the experts on this stuff to pitch in (:
Thanks in advance!
td