$750 for a 1k inverter in a waterproof box?
Having the capability to charge house batteries when driving is smart but not inexpensive to set up (vehicles with 'smart' alternators or deeply discharged or lithium batteries need a DC to DC charger).All depends on if you drive the vehicle to explore, go to town, etc r if it just sits for a week.
My truck sits for two week often with only about 1% measurable discharge: trivial. My other vehicle can sit for 6 months and still start easily.Even sitting newer vehicles run the battery down.
Ambulances and fire trucks are designed to idle long periods and have special alternators that produce more current and air flow at idle speeds. The trade off is an ambulance with 100K miles on the it has about 2 - 3 times as many hours on the motor. Regular vehicle alternators are designed to need airflow from moving most of the time or they will heat up with heavy loads.The ambo has a master switch, 250 amp alt & 2 large batteries....
Here is a concept, mount a regular inverter inside your vehicle so water wouldn’t be an issue.That’s less the same price as a Honda i1000 and it is not even waterproof
If your truck is diesel it probably uses very little fuel while idling (but who can afford diesel?). Gas motors - not so much, unless they are Atkinson cycle engines like in a Prius.Here is a concept, mount a regular inverter inside your vehicle so water wouldn’t be an issue.
So I’m suppose to let my truck idle for 10 hrs while I charge my house batteries? And this is more efficient than a generator? My Yamaha EUi 2000 uses around 1 gal for 10 hrs. My truck idling for hours would use a lot more. Then what? an empty fuel tank in the truck. 2000 PSW in the truck and a 1200 under the seat in the Outback. No issues. IMO this is just a gimmick, one more thing, heat dissipation of the inverter in a sealed box would be an issue.
Yes, if your alternator is sufficient for the cause, no need to upgrade.A DC to DC charger would be a cheaper, easier, and safer alternative to changing you alternator to higher output, especially if you have a smart alternator and/or lithium house batteries.
For idling for long periods of time it would be cheaper to get a 1000W generator (>0.13 gal/hr) and battery charger than idling for 8 hours (3.2 gal - 6.5 gal a van = $10 to $20 per night).
We also have a 140A HD alternator with a Blue Seas Systems ACR battery link for charging the house batteries while driving.If your truck is diesel it probably uses very little fuel while idling (but who can afford diesel?). Gas motors - not so much, unless they are Atkinson cycle engines like in a Prius.
Personally, I'd upgrade my alternator and match it to a good charging system to top off the house batteries whenever driving. Idling would only be an occasional need - such as overnight AC during heat waves.
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