Deleted member 62288
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'You had a Schaudt regulator fitted' .... that sounds typical of the Motorhome Leisure industry. Apart from total newbies, the customers know more than the Dealers.
Whoever neglected to fit the adaptor was a pillock.![]()
It's usually a job that I would do myself, but I was in the Algarve and sampling my first batch of organic Sativa.
The fella that sold and fitted the solar upgrade was a nice chap and his prices were good (for the solar panels etc)
- I got the Sativa from a gypsy girl in the town.
Overall, he was up on the roof fitting 3 extra panels to the existing single. Installed a Victron battery monitor and routed all the negatives thro a shunt. The system worked well in spite of my LBs being knackered. He fitted the Schaudtt LR 1218 pmw controller also.
But the schaudt pmw controller has a 18A limit (from memory) while the panels were capable of delivering much more. Plus there was zero engine battery charging via the elecktroblok unit.
And I kept running out of 12v when parked up for more than 3-4 sunny days.
The system was insufficient for my daily load.
Once home and learning from 6 months around Iberia, I decided to upgrade the upgrade by removing the upgrade and fitting a Victron mppt 40A controller, which happened to have load terminals available. The schaudt PMW controller was thus redundant (and is for sale).
I replaced the dud 2x 135 LBs with 2x230Ah Victron AGMs.
I was finding the Victron battery monitor to be a fiddly overkill for my needs so this was removed and replaced with a trusty NASA BM1.
(The Victron Battery monitor and shunt are also for sale)
This combination has been meeting my needs for around 3 weeks now with the LBs being fully recharged by midday most days, and that is from English sunshine too. That's living in the van full time.
My last remaining gap to plug is the matter of keeping the engine battery topped up while parked up, hence this thread.
As the Elecktroblok does not charge the engine battery from solar, even with the correct LR 1218 schaudt pmw solar controller plugged in,
I needed to find some way of using the spare power available at the victron mppt solar controller on the load terminals, to maintain the engine battery.
The simplest and cheapest way would be to fit a cheap 20A solar controller, fed by the load terminals and connected directly to the engine battery. But given that my investment on the upgrade to the upgrade is currently around £1,500 I chose the Sterling BB1230 to perform the task.
An added benefit over a simple split-charge relay type of configuration, is that my config will charge both engine and leisure batteries simultaneously rather than either/or. Given my current and expected daily load I should never run out of juice, even if parked up for months.
The BB1230's role is purely to maintain the charge to the engine battery while parked up and off-grid. Maybe an overkill at worse.
But some folks appear to doubt my sanity regarding this intention, but I am unconvinced that this will not work.
I have to finish off the refurbishment of the seat / locker lids and various other chippy type stuff presently.
Then I can clear up the chippy tools and sawdust and get back to the electrics.
Next step is to site the ugly Sterling box somewhere out of sight, route the cables and connect the B2B between the MPPT load output and onto the engine battery..
The Sterling blurb tells me that it is simple to install with just 2 wires in and 2 wires out.
So unless someone actually knows why this will fail,
that is the plan.
james
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