by PcHistorian » Fri Mar 09, 2012 8:51 am
@perkgana, ok, here's the computation. You can run on battery, if there's no 120v available. If there is 120v available you want to get all your batteries to the "charged and maintain" point. Now, at 45A charging, you can not only "fast charge" (watch the charge rate for some smaller batteries) but you can still have enough energy to run all your 12v appliances while the batteries charge. (usually you don't put a lot of "big drain" items on the 12v circuit.) The other half of that coin is that you now have 120v access, and you can run all your 120v stuff. So you kind of have a mixture of the various levels, 120v (air conditioning, TV, microwave, (chargers), radio, power tools,...), 12v major (tv-radio-fans-"dome lights") and 12v minor (like LED lights). So what you have to do is balance the ability to run at any given level, with what you want to run at any given level.
Such as, "do I want to run the tv (television) while charging, and it's a 12 volt only tv." then you'd want more charging power. But if you can go totally off the 12v to 120v, while charging batteries at 1.5 amps, (over night for a full charge) then you should have no problem. If you HAVE TO charge in 2-4 hours full charge, (drained to maintain level) then you'll need more amps. Some people have the ability to charge from their car (tow vehicle/TV) through the tail-light connector (7-pin, put in bigger wires for the 12v lines, 10 gauge wire). Get indicator lights as to how your charge is doing. If you disconnect to drive somewhere, and someone is staying at your camp and using 12v, no 120v available, then just recharge from the tow vehicle when you get back. We are kind of "over lapping systems" to prevent getting caught short. It's our way.
Bottom line, if you can get the 120v to run the charger then use batteries only as a back up, you should never have any problems. Just make sure you charge fully before you go, so if you can't get a site with 120v you still have your battery back up anyway. (and if you don't have 120v to charge the batteries, it won't matter how many amps your charger has anyway.) So you are going to weight the two sides of your own, personal electrical situation. Do I have to have 120v, or can I do with 12v for 90% of the time. Solar panels are getting popular (I have even seen "solar ivy" that looks like ground ivy but is solar panels) and so you can go 12v and keep charged that way. Then when you get home from the weekend, just make sure you charge up fully. If you get stuck with a "No 120v" site and have a 45amp charger, you can pull over to a friend's site and fully charge in a few hours, when you need to. With 1.5 amps you can't do that, you'd need overnight for a full charge.
I am using 2 small batteries at this point, rechargeable. One is an auto-booster battery, which is about 300 amps for 10 seconds, or 50ah (amp/hours) for radios, dome lights, recharge the usb phone,..., etc. The other is a building "emergency light" type battery (3ah) for led's only. My total charge and maintain is 0.8 amps. I also have a full 120v wiring scheme in the trailer though.
Personally, I will only be using 120v, "have to have" for heating in cold weather. I'll have an optional "hot plate" but I can always cook in the camp fire (ex-boyscout). I can even go without the 12v and just use flashlights. But it is nice to have the "leave on" lighting, even if it is only LED's, which are getting to be really bright, and use almost no power, especially from large batteries. You can probably run LED only, continuously, from a large, deep cycle battery for months, without recharging. I have a 10 amp automobile charger, booster that does auto maintain, but I probably won't be using it or even bringing it. It won't fit in my "medicine chest" type sized cabinets and so I don't normally choose to lug it along. Over kill. 0.8 amps is fine for me.
This level of camping and TD'ing is so much more "the experiment" than the "make it and change not" situation. Invest small until you know for sure is the best plan. Scrounge, pick brains and make an educated guess.
I hope that helped. If you have any more specific questions, ask. This is the place to pick brains. If I can think of another forum or web page to get you better information, we'll give you that, too.
Oh, one more thing, with the "maintain" part of that charger, you can leave the battery plugged in over the winter and between trips, and never have to worry about charging it up at the last minute or getting caught without a charge when you want to go, or accidentally not maintaining the battery charge and having a battery get ruined because it wasn't trickle charged. You'd have the trickle/auto maintainer.