I am building a teardrop trailer that will have a house battery. I haven't decided on the size yet but my daily use is around 15 amp hours give or take. That would go up if we get a 12v fridge. If we do get a fridge it will live in the back of the Jeep and run off the Jeep when we are driving and then when we stop we'll have a wire from the trailer to the back of the Jeep.
I have been looking at options to charge the battery. It looks like there are a few choices.
Solar, I live in the southwest so it's hard not to consider it. Pros are not to expensive, with the 15 AH I'm planing on using recharge could be 2-4 hours. Option on panel sizes, I could go with two 50 watt and use one or both depending how much charge I need. I think I could mount a 50 watt on the top rack when the rack isn't needed, that way I could charge even when driving. Cons, Not always having sun, Having to pull panels out when you stop, having a place to store the panel we said nothing is to be stored in the cabin on the bed. Theft of panels is an issue so can't leave the campsite with them out.
Charging off the Jeep .Pros free power, can't beat that. Cons, might have a hard time fully charging an AGM battery without going with a DC to DC charger ($$$), or play games to fool the charge system to put out more voltage. It's slow depending how much other load there is. Nothing to really control the charge unless you spend big money on a charge controller. Have to run #10 or #8 wires from the Jeep battery to the trailer battery with fuses.
Crazy third idea. I have a Noco 10 amp charger that will be in the togune box with the battery to charge when we have shore power. Our Jeep has an inverter (300 watt I think) built in. You can see where this is going. All I need is an extension cord and I can charge the battery in 1.5 hours or so. We rarely stay in the same place for more than a few days, and I can size the battery so we can run for a few days without charging.
So what am I missing why wouldn't that be the best way to go. The only problem I can see is the charger has some smarts built into it and may need a pure sign wave inverter which I'm sure the Jeep doesn't have. But that is something I can check on.
Any thoughts?
Todd
I have been looking at options to charge the battery. It looks like there are a few choices.
Solar, I live in the southwest so it's hard not to consider it. Pros are not to expensive, with the 15 AH I'm planing on using recharge could be 2-4 hours. Option on panel sizes, I could go with two 50 watt and use one or both depending how much charge I need. I think I could mount a 50 watt on the top rack when the rack isn't needed, that way I could charge even when driving. Cons, Not always having sun, Having to pull panels out when you stop, having a place to store the panel we said nothing is to be stored in the cabin on the bed. Theft of panels is an issue so can't leave the campsite with them out.
Charging off the Jeep .Pros free power, can't beat that. Cons, might have a hard time fully charging an AGM battery without going with a DC to DC charger ($$$), or play games to fool the charge system to put out more voltage. It's slow depending how much other load there is. Nothing to really control the charge unless you spend big money on a charge controller. Have to run #10 or #8 wires from the Jeep battery to the trailer battery with fuses.
Crazy third idea. I have a Noco 10 amp charger that will be in the togune box with the battery to charge when we have shore power. Our Jeep has an inverter (300 watt I think) built in. You can see where this is going. All I need is an extension cord and I can charge the battery in 1.5 hours or so. We rarely stay in the same place for more than a few days, and I can size the battery so we can run for a few days without charging.
So what am I missing why wouldn't that be the best way to go. The only problem I can see is the charger has some smarts built into it and may need a pure sign wave inverter which I'm sure the Jeep doesn't have. But that is something I can check on.
Any thoughts?
Todd