tx2sturgis said:A 950 watt generator is closer to about 7 amps. Might be close to 10 or so on peak.
A 20 amp charger for 12v batteries is going to pull about 2-3 amps, maybe 5 amps (at 120v) at the beginning of charging a depleted battery.
These are all round numbers.
You don't have any 'voltage going to waste' ...actually your genset and your charger seem to be closely matched.
Hircarra said:Then where is all the wattage going, or are you suggesting my battery is being charged at close to 950 watts?
tx2sturgis said:If the load pulls more wattage, the generator will burn more gasoline.
If the load is modest or very small, the generator will throttle back and burn less gasoline (or LP if it uses that).
The wattage doesn't 'go' anywhere, except into the load you have plugged into the generator.
tx2sturgis said:If you intend to max out the load on the generator constantly, it will run hotter, burn more fuel, need more maintenance, and will make more noise. If it is running at maximum wattage, any additional load will probably either shut it down or trip the overload circuit or the breaker. Not a good plan.
Car engines might have a rating of say, 350 hp, but you don't work them at 350 hp ALL the time, only sometimes.
But, it can be done, by using a larger capacity battery charger, OR, you can use some of that 'surplus' to power another battery charger, or other loads such as fans, refrigerators, laptop chargers, etc.
tx2sturgis said:Plug more things in.
Simple as that.
.
jimindenver said:Use a power strip to plug more in.
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