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Don’t you mean have the charger on a time clock?This is quite a good indication of a setup which maintains the battery but also takes advantage of the 'free' power from the solar....
Screenshot 2023-10-05 at 11-43-44 Monty - VRM Portal by David, on Flickr
Plugged into EHU, but the charger is on float and is drawing nothing as all the power requirements are being met by the Solar.
However .... what you could do to make it even more efficient if you have solar and EHU is have the EHU on a time clock so it only comes on later in the day for a period of time. This would let the solar work harder when it is available. If you have both EHU and Solar you would have a situation where the EHU will start working to keep the battery topped up as soon as it is dusk and maintain that until the solar wakes up, and you would never get the full capablity of the solar during the day (hence why in the screeshot above, all the solar is doing to providing just what is needed as the battery is full.
If you are looking at the cost of the electricity when the charger is active though in the example above, you could be looking at maybe 15 pence a day if you have a compressor fridge? (if you have an Absorption fridge running on AC when laid up, that is more like £1.50 a day just to run the fridge!)
(I could actually set the charger to 'storage' instead of float, which could be better for some - maybe most - setups in a situation where the motorhome is laid up unused, but in my particular config, the storage mode was not suitable)
When on EHU you really want it 24/7 as it runs the fridge and powers the AC sockets for toaster, kettle, microwave, electric oven, and also the heating and more. The 12v use is minimal daytime maybe the water pump only, and the heating pump and fans if cold.
You can however turn the battery charger on and off. If you are on a metered supply I can see that it may be worth turning the charger off daytime when solar is keeping the battery topped up.
However the charging voltage is lower with solar. As soon as you turn the charger on the battery voltage rises so would this not offset some of the potential metered supply savings.
And in any case are you saving only pennies rather than pounds by having the charger on a timer?
And doesn’t the constant switching on and off of the charger (or even the EHU if this was the genuine idea) affect the working life of everything and shortens it before requires a replacement?
Or do the electrics last forever regardless of the number of times they are switched on and off?