Or buy one of those jump start in a box things in the event you do drain it too 
much accidentally.  

From: Josh Luthman 
Sent: Wednesday, July 12, 2017 8:45 AM
To: [email protected] 
Subject: Re: [AFMUG] OT: Road Trip Battery

Xbox One S looks to be ~105 watts at full load from the first few websites.  I 
can see the laptop being 50 watts. 

On a lot of vehicles all the 12v outlets are on one fuse, be aware of that.

If you only want say 300 watts why not get a 1000 watt inverter, fuse it, and 
throw on a PriorityStart so you don't kill the battery?  Should be like $400 
total.


Josh Luthman
Office: 937-552-2340
Direct: 937-552-2343
1100 Wayne St
Suite 1337
Troy, OH 45373

On Wed, Jul 12, 2017 at 2:21 AM, Sterling Jacobson <[email protected]> wrote:

  I think the alternator is buried in my Toyota Sienna, so I’m not going to 
mess with it, or a second battery I guess.



  I’ll just live with the combined 100-120w restriction on all the outlets in 
my car combined.



  I suspect the alternate is bigger than norm just because of that allowance 
given to the two AC plugs and DC plugs.



  I might try and sneak in a 50W computer for serving videos. Or maybe an Xbox 
One S that I think runs around 50-60W.



  As long as the kids aren’t all charging their devices at the same time, lol!



  From: Af [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of George Skorup
  Sent: Tuesday, July 11, 2017 11:28 PM
  To: [email protected]


  Subject: Re: [AFMUG] OT: Road Trip Battery


  Alternator rating = rotor speed, not engine RPM. Crankshaft pulley to 
alternator pulley ratio is usually like 3:1. So 2k engine RPM = 6k alternator 
RPM = max power. Probably varies by model/mfg. Yeah, idle is usually gonna be a 
little bit less. A high-output alternator is the better choice. You can screw 
around with pulley ratios for more power at idle, but you run the risk of 
over-driving the alternator at higher engine RPM. IIRC, ~18-20k RPM is ungood 
for it.

  My '11 Silverado has a 145A alternator. Dual rectifiers. Maybe triple. I 
forget. Idle=600 RPM. Still produces at least 110A based on my clamp-on ammeter 
and a bad battery that always pulled about 90A. Probably bad cells. Made it 7 
years. New battery pulled around 100A for 10 minutes or so to top it off. The 
typical commute of 15-30 minutes should be ample time to maintain a battery 
that's in decent shape/age. The law of averages, that's what the auto mfgs aim 
for. Most people don't need 180A at idle, just like most of our customers don't 
need 1Gbps, or 100Mbps, all the time.. or ever.

  On 7/11/2017 9:05 PM, Adam Moffett wrote:

    My '04 Hyundai Accent has a 90 amp alternator.  ....though I never did 
figure out how many RPM's they assume when giving you that rating.  I read some 
conflicting facts on that.



    Anyway, I have 1000 watt inverter and I've had approx 600 watts on it while 
idling for several hours.  I can't prove whether the alternator kept up or the 
battery was slowly draining.







    ------ Original Message ------

    From: [email protected]

    To: "Animal Farm" <[email protected]>

    Sent: 7/11/2017 8:49:23 PM

    Subject: Re: [AFMUG] OT: Road Trip Battery



      If you install the isolation diodes, then yes.  But that only prevents a 
dead starter battery.  If you have 3-4 devices all using 50 watts, and you have 
a 50 amp alternator, you only have 600 watts total.  The air conditioner blower 
is going to take probably 200 watts, the onboard electronics perhaps 100 watts. 
 So maybe 300 excess.  I wouldn’t count on even that much.  I have seen aux 
connectors fused at 15 amps so that is 180 watts.  



      My dell has a 90 watt power supply.  So two of those running non stop?



      From: Jaime Solorza 

      Sent: Tuesday, July 11, 2017 6:32 PM

      To: Animal Farm 

      Subject: Re: [AFMUG] OT: Road Trip Battery



      Not at all...Pep Boys and others sell a simple to install dual battery 
inverter and heavy duty fuse system.  A good quality inverter would work well 
and no big thing to install.  I use this for wiring up inverters for vans and 
buses to a solenoid to start inverter when vehicle is started.  Prevents 
draining battery..

      Jaime Solorza



      On Jul 11, 2017 6:14 PM, "Sterling Jacobson" <[email protected]> wrote:

        I've got a cross country family trip from Utah to New York coming up 
and I want to wire up a secondary battery to my Toyota Minivan.

        I know, maybe I'm crazy, but I want to be able to run all our 
electronics on the trip, including maybe a computer for serving up video 
(another topic).

        I want it on a secondary system so I get more power and don't kill the 
main car battery.

        From what I gather I would need a sealed battery to avoid fumes 
(mostly).
        I would need a some sort of control system so the battery can charge 
from the alternator, but not drain the main battery.
        I need high gage wire between the batteries/alternater along with fuse, 
and also between secondary battery and large inverter for AC power.

        Probably not possible to shove another battery under the hood of the 
mini-van, but I haven't checked.

        Is this a silly idea?





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