So second river trial last night closes off this stage of the little boat fit out. First run saw me with a broken neutral cutout switch that had me using a fuse to bridge across the plug to get it to start. That fixed I went for a run yesterday and into the evening.
The little 40Ah Winston Lithium battery pack that I installed down a little pocket at the back of the boat starts the 60hp Suzuki with ease. Shows how much the blokes at battery world Maroochydore know who said it would even start an outboard. The fitment is tight and a pain in the arse to get out, so here’s hoping it last a long time.
The 163Ah Calb battery pack I installed under the console is working well as intended. About 3h of spot locking on day one and about 4 hours of spot locking on day two without a recharge other than the nominal inputs from the outboard that accounted for probably two hours of run time has it sitting at 60% SOC.
I don’t think the Victron BMV712 smart shunt accounts for the power that is put back in by the outboard. Throughout the couple of hours the outboard is running, even though the outboard is able to only add 11.5amps per hour, I saw the both batteries increase in voltage and settle above where it was once turned off, but the state of charge shown on the app/gauge never went up at all. So I guess that gives me a little redundancy out on the water, though I have the alarms set at 20% SOC just in case.
I wasn’t happy with the VSR remaining closed (paralleled) while the engine wasn’t running. I know at 12.8v the starter battery will still start the outboard. But in the standard configuration, once the start battery hits 13.4 volts they remain as one large 200Ah battery until both are essentially 12.8V where the VSR opens the circuit to protect the start battery. Being lithium, at 12.8V the start battery is very low by that point. I just didn’t want that battery to be drawn from at all whilst I was fishing on spot lock etc.
So I found the ignition wire by using a test light to find out which wire gave the engine power when the key was turned to on and took the little red looped wire in the back of the VSR and cut it, extended it and spliced it into the loom wire. Now for both batteries to be paralleled, the 13.4V on the start battery needs to be met AND the ignition needs to be on. I hope this helps someone down the track that wants their VSR to do the same thing.
The whole time I had the engine running, including some minutes at WOT, the sounder read the device voltage as 13.8V maximum. While when the engine was off it read the same as the voltage as the voltage meter on the Victron gauge. This tells me that my outboard is putting out a maximum of 13.8V (Scottar is that a safe assumption??). If correct, my earlier concerns about the outboards stator potentially putting out too many volts and possibly damaging the lithium’s was unfounded.
I’m also assuming that the way I have the VSR set up, if I drain my house battery down low and start the engines then some of the draw from the house battery after the VSR parallels them, will come from the house battery. I can see this happening if I just turn the ignition on. The house starts to go up in volts and the start begins to drop. I’m hoping that this will in some way takes some pressure off the Suzuki stator and stop it from frying it. I’ll report back if there are any issues in that sense.
The 55Lb thrust from the 12v Minnkota seems to be more than enough to hold the little Webster in place and the shaft length is more than adequate. The largest draw I saw with it on was under 3Amps. That’s on lvl10 speed heading into the wind and current. On spot lock with no light etc on it varied between 1&2 amps.
The biggest draw on the boat comes from the Marco Fluid Tech Salt Water pump. On start up I saw it spike at 27Amps and runs at about 15amps in continuous operation. I am probably going to have to re-think using this to run my bait tank as I don’t want to be drawing that much power to keep the baits healthy.
I had to return the Hard Korr boat lighting kit I bought from Road Tech Marine. It lasted 24 hours after I’d run all the wires under the floor and through the gunwales only to have the remote control stop working. Also getting 1-2 and 1-3 way splitters and extension cables is a no go. It took me 3 days to get a response from them. It made using that kit not that desirable and it failing was a blessing. I do not recommend using this kit. The far cheaper kits from Kings are easier to use and far more robust with tons of splitters, extensions and dimmer switches. Let’s see how they last.