Charlie,

I would suggest the following:

1. Yes, set up a buss bar to the house bank for your charging sources.

2. I assume you’re looking to set up solar on the stern of the boat, either off 
the stern rail or on the bimini. You should have plenty of access to get wiring 
into the back cabin where your batteries are. Put the controller near the buss. 

3. As for a disconnect (not sure why you’d want to disconnect), most panels 
have their own connector so that you can connect to wires or link to others for 
more wattage. Just unplug it when you want to. 

4. It is advisable, even with an ACR, to run all charging sources (shore 
charger, alternator and solar) to one bank. That being said, I never found a 
logical reason as to why, but everyone says you should. With that in mind, I’d 
run them all to the house bank to ensure everything keeps going (bilge pump, 
fridge, lights, etc.) and not the engine bank.  The ACR will charge both 
anyway. 

That’s my $0.02. 


All the best,

Edd


Edd M. Schillay
Captain of the Starship Enterprise
C&C 37+ | Sail No: NCC-1701-B
Venice Yacht Club | Venice Island, FL

Starship Enterprise's Captain's Log <http://enterpriseb.blogspot.com/>






        




On Jun 24, 2020, at 12:03 PM, Charlie Nelson via CnC-List 
<cnc-list@cnc-list.com> wrote:






My early post/request was incorrect (and thus confusing) in the details:

I have a Xantrex battery monitor that replaced my old voltage switch when my dc 
power system was upgraded--my original post called it a Victron or 
something--anyway all it does is monitor the batteries.

My current system has 2 Group 31 Northstar 'house' batteries and a Group 27 or 
31 'start' battery. When this was installed, the old 1/2/all switch was 
eliminated and replaced by a Blue Seas Dual Circuit Plus switch with 
Off-On-Combine Batteries positions and an ACR from Blue Seas.

At the dock, the batteries are charged by a Xantrex 20/40 (forget which). 
Otherwise they are hooked up via the Blue Seas switch  with the ACR. All the 
batteries are located in 2 built in battery compartments in the port side of 
the aft cabin under the bunk. One compartment houses 2 batteries and the other 
has a single battery. The switch and ACR are located immediately above the 
batteries on the aft bulkhead  with leads of about 3 feet.



Now to my original questions:

I would like to hook up a solar panel to trickle charge the system in my 
absence and would like advice on physically how to do it. I have a MPPT 
controller, etc. but need a simple/safe way to connect/disconnect it and how:  
directly to one of the battery banks?

Similarly I like the idea of an emergency battery/charger (the portable kind 
that keeps its internal battery charged from AC but is light enough to carry on 
board) that can be hooked up to get going if all the above goes to hell,

Where is the best place to patch such a connection to the system for an 
emergency start system--presumably this same place could be used also hook in 
the solar panel? 

My educated guess is to attach a buss bar to one of the batteries (the start or 
house?) and then attach the wires of the solar controller and the external 
charger to those.

Maybe since I have the ACR, it doesn't matter since it will distribute the 
charge accordingly? (BTW, the shore charger delivers charge to the start 
battery and the house batteries via separate charger outputs.)

Thanks to all who tried to answer my original post in spite of the 
mis-information it contained!!

Charlie Nelson
Water Phantom

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