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J.B.Slocomb J.B.Slocomb is offline
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Default How to charge battery for electric 12v winch, without tripping fuses

On Sat, 13 Apr 2013 23:03:57 -0500, Ignoramus17560
wrote:

I need to install a 12v winch and a battery next to it, on a trailer.
This winch may need a huge amount of current.

I hope that this auxiliary battery will provide the power needed to
run the winch, however, I want it to be charged from the vehicle's
auxiliary 12v supply.

What concerns me is that when the winch is working, the battery may
demand a lot of current from the vehicle, and blow a fuse. At the same
time, after use, it may also require a lot of current with the same
result.

Ideally, I would like a current limiting device, of some kind, between
the vehicle and the wnich battery, that would limit current to some
low value, like 15 amps, happily supplying any amps under 15, but
automatically limiting the current to 15 amps only.

Is there anything of the sort, that I can purchase off-the-shelf?

I do realize that I can just wire a resistor in series, and I do have
a 1.4 ohm, 290 watt resistor and some others, but I was hoping for
something more elegant.

Thanks

i


I don't know about your vehicle winch but boats with an electric
anchor winch don't seem to have a problem. Example:
100 lb capacity @62'/min = 25A
400 Lb @ 62'/min = 35A
900 lb @ 80'/min = 70A

Most boats, if they use a winch battery, just have it connected in
parallel to the main house bank and don't run the winch unless the
main engine or the generator is running.

As for restricting battery charging to 15 amps, I would think that
your alternator would likely be capable of producing 60 - 70 amps, and
maybe more, why would you restrict charging to such a low level?




--
Cheers,

John B.