That makes sense.SubaruDave wrote:It's Similar to the alternator in a car, It runs all the electrical and charges the battery (while using the battery to minimize voltage spikes)
So I guess the answer to your question is, it will run the trolling motor and charge the battery at the same time. (as long as the generator puts out more watts/amps than the motor pulls)
StandUpGuy wrote:It would be a sailboat with an electric trolling motor for alternative propultion. The plan is to have the ability of simply charging a second battery for an extended trip in the boat. I was simply wondering about what if both batteries were discharged and I had emergency need for electric motor propultion. Perhaps easiest of all is simply to always run the generator to charge one of the batteries so I am never without charge.
I don't have the boat so it is all planning at this point.I had an old Evenrude 9 hp on an old sailboat a while back and it was a fabulous motor. Those little outboards are great.eamarquardt wrote:StandUpGuy wrote:It would be a sailboat with an electric trolling motor for alternative propultion. The plan is to have the ability of simply charging a second battery for an extended trip in the boat. I was simply wondering about what if both batteries were discharged and I had emergency need for electric motor propultion. Perhaps easiest of all is simply to always run the generator to charge one of the batteries so I am never without charge.
An outboard would be far less complicated. I have a nice British Seagull available.
Cheers,
Gus
This is exactly what I was thinking. thanks for that. My logic is that on a small sailboat I do not want the high weight of an outboard motor up high on the transom. an electric trolling motor is light weight and the two heavy batteries can be built in low on the boat bottom thereby lowering the center of gravity. So with your set up of two batteries and a generator I can (in an emergency situation) run the engine on one battery and charge the other at the same time. Maybe in a year or so I can build such a boat.glenpinpat wrote:We use a generator on our boat. It runs flood lights for our bow hunting setup. We have it hooked to also to a battery charger that has a fast charge system it will not run an electric trolling motor but it will charge a second battery in about 3hrs, letting us bow hunt all night if we choose. We have 2 deep cycle marine batteries that we can switch. Patrick
StandUpGuy wrote:This is exactly what I was thinking. thanks for that. My logic is that on a small sailboat I do not want the high weight of an outboard motor up high on the transom. an electric trolling motor is light weight and the two heavy batteries can be built in low on the boat bottom thereby lowering the center of gravity. So with your set up of two batteries and a generator I can (in an emergency situation) run the engine on one battery and charge the other at the same time. Maybe in a year or so I can build such a boat.glenpinpat wrote:We use a generator on our boat. It runs flood lights for our bow hunting setup. We have it hooked to also to a battery charger that has a fast charge system it will not run an electric trolling motor but it will charge a second battery in about 3hrs, letting us bow hunt all night if we choose. We have 2 deep cycle marine batteries that we can switch. Patrick
eamarquardt wrote:StandUpGuy wrote:This is exactly what I was thinking. thanks for that. My logic is that on a small sailboat I do not want the high weight of an outboard motor up high on the transom. an electric trolling motor is light weight and the two heavy batteries can be built in low on the boat bottom thereby lowering the center of gravity. So with your set up of two batteries and a generator I can (in an emergency situation) run the engine on one battery and charge the other at the same time. Maybe in a year or so I can build such a boat.glenpinpat wrote:We use a generator on our boat. It runs flood lights for our bow hunting setup. We have it hooked to also to a battery charger that has a fast charge system it will not run an electric trolling motor but it will charge a second battery in about 3hrs, letting us bow hunt all night if we choose. We have 2 deep cycle marine batteries that we can switch. Patrick
Your logic escapes me. Two deep cycle batteries, a generator, battery charger, and a trolling motor versus a 2 or so hp outboard and your concern is weight? Even if you were considering something as small as a Sabot, I think a 2 hp 2 cycle engine would give you far better sailing and motoring performance, better reliability (water and electricity sometimes don't play well together), and far less complexity and maintenance.
I had a 38 foot sloop in the Santa Barbara Channel (windy lane to locals, hurricane gulch to non locals) so I'm familiar with sailing and boats.
We used to sail a Hobie cat off the beach. Our "alternate propulsion" system was a paddle.
Cheers,
Gus
StandUpGuy wrote:In a flat bottom sailboat often ballast is added on the floor of the boat to lower the center of gravity. Instead of adding lead I would add two marine batteries. This is good weight in a sailboat. Weight added to one end of the boat and up high as in an outboard is bad weight.
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