Wiring electirical service
 

Wiring electirical service

Started by mike802, July 17, 2015, 09:53:19 AM

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mike802

Hello everyone:  I am planning and acquiring all the stuff I need to build the electrical service for my conversion.  I am planning for 50 amp service using a inverter and a battery bank with future additions for solar and a generator.  Most everything will run off 12 volt, but I will have some 110 also for the fridge, outlets and a TV.  Pretty much standard RV stuff.

So far I have the inverter with a built in charger.
On order, I have a 30 foot 50 amp power cord, a 50 to 30 amp adapter and a 12 volt fuse panel.  I still have many other things to order, or purchase locally. 

I would like to get some opinions on inverter placement.  In the living space, or in the basement?  I know it must be kept as close as possible to the batteries, but not in the same compartment.  Inverter must also have free flowing air to help it stay cool: will placement inside the cabinets of living space be to limiting on air circulation?  I have tried to search for RV wiring diagrams to help me with my planning put haven't had much luck, most of what I have been able to find is either stick and staple stuff, or way to simplified to help with the planning and building of a system. Anyone have any good links?
Mike
1983 MCI MC9
Vermont

bevans6

Inverters are kind of loud - fans running and transformers humming.  Mine is in the front luggage bay on a wall I built for all my electrical panels, and the batteries are directly forward in the old AC condenser compartment.

Brian
1980 MCI MC-5C, 8V-71T from a M-110 self propelled howitzer
Allison MT-647
Tatamagouche, Nova Scotia

mike802

Thanks Brian:  Do you a sub panel for 110 and 12 volt some where in the living space?  What are you using for batteries and how many in your battery bank?  Thanks Mike.
Mike
1983 MCI MC9
Vermont

Iceni John

The generally-accepted wisdom is to put breaker panels inside the bus so they are easily accessible without you needing to crawl around outside in the rain in the middle of the night if one trips.   The Square D QO panels are good for 12VDC and 120VAC, so one of each is the cheapest and easiest solution for house loads  -  all the big box stores sell QO breakers (but don't get the Homeline ones which are lower quality and not DC-rated).   As Brian says, keep the inverter as close to the house batteries as possible, but in a separate compartment  -  its main DC feed cables must be short and fat.   Its breakers or fuses should be close to the source of the power, i.e at or close to the house batteries.

John
1990 Crown 2R-40N-552 (the Super II):  6V92TAC / DDEC II / Jake,  HT740.     Hecho en Chino.
2kW of tiltable solar.
Behind the Orange Curtain, SoCal.

bevans6

I have an RV panel in the living space that used to be a converter, it has a built in AC breaker space for around 6 breakers, and a separate (as must be separate) DC distribution area with around 12 fuses.  I have a second AC pony panel with four breakers beside the inverter - that distributes the inverter-fed loads, so I have a selection of AC circuits that are fed by outside power, generator or inverter, and a second selection that are fed by outside power and generator only.  I did this so that there could not be a mistake and my fridge try to run off the inverter and batteries by mistake.  Also engine pre-heater, air compressor, those kinds of loads.  Everything in the house itself is pretty much run off the inverter, if it is on.  There is an ATS to select between outside power and generator, and the inverter only comes on if both of those are not present.  Whichever source is in use bonds neutral to ground.  I am set up and designed for a normal 30 amp supply.

I have four 6 volt 232 AH wet batteries on the floor in the condenser bay, for 232 AH at 24 volts nominal.  Great ventilation and they fit where the fan shroud used to be.  Be aware that cutting out the fan shroud is a royal PITA.  The red switch you see is a battery selector switch for the inverter.  I picked up the main bus 24 volt cable at the AC relay box (roof of the front driver's side luggage bay, and ran it to the selector switch, and the feed from the house bank also comes in to the selector switch.  It can be set to off, house bank, or combine house bank and bus start batteries.  That lets me run the inverter from the bus alternator and charge the house bank while driving, lets me run the bus (starter, lights, all the regular bus stuff) off just the house bank if there is a problem with the bus start batteries (happened once on a trip, lost a cell in one of the 8D's and I was able to just open their disconnect switch and the bus ran off the house batteries just fine till I replaced the starts with gp 31 truck batteries), and lets me charge and maintain both sets of batteries from the charger in the inverter.  I cannot imagine a more versatile way to set up the electrical system to suit my needs.  This is Rev. 2.1, btw, it evolved into this over time as I learned what worked and what I needed.

Edit:  I agree with John that having the fuse/breaker panels inside is the better way to go.  I put my pony panel beside the inverter down in the bay because I didn't have an accessible space inside the bus for another panel.  I had already lost half my bar drawer space putting in the first panel, and booze storage was more important to me that the possibility of me having to go outside to reset a breaker (which has never happened, knock on wood).

Brian
1980 MCI MC-5C, 8V-71T from a M-110 self propelled howitzer
Allison MT-647
Tatamagouche, Nova Scotia

TomC

I believe in having all electrical service in the living area. I have seen circuit breakers, transfer switches, inverters in the cargo bays. But-I have had too many times the electricity go out during a rain storm. I simply switch to generator, and start from inside. Inverters can make some noise, but just put them up front and can't hear them from the bedroom. Good Luck, TomC
Tom & Donna Christman. 1985 Kenworth 40ft Super C with garage. '77 AMGeneral 10240B; 8V-71TATAIC V730.

mike802

Thanks guys: Very helpful information.  Brian, having the battery's in the condenser bay make a lot of sense, but where have you installed your generator?
Mike
1983 MCI MC9
Vermont

belfert

I have my inverter in my bay, but I really want to free up the bay space.  It is also pretty far from the batteries although I have 4/0 cable to avoid voltage drop.  I have thought about moving it upstairs, but the only good location is near the bunks where the fans might disturb sleep.  My AGM batteries are under one of the bunks.
Brian Elfert - 1995 Dina Viaggio 1000 Series 60/B500 - 75% done but usable - Minneapolis, MN

Dave5Cs

Same as Brian. Inverter and batteries in front bay driver side. Separated batteries from inverter. 2 breaker Sub panel above driver and front panels 1 being DC with 20 switch breakers and 2nd panel AC with about the same plus a main shut off switch. Remote next to it all. Generator switch above driver also as well as water heater switch.
I used 4 - 6volt Us batteries with 232 Ah at 20% rate. 4024 Hybrid Magnum inverter with Battery monitor and 20-60 Vanner for 24 volt and 12 volt.
Dave5Cs
"Perfect Frequency"1979 MCI MC5Cs 6V-71,644MT Allison.
2001 Jeep Cherokee Sport 60th Anniversary edition.
1998 Jeep TJ ,(Gone)
Somewhere in the USA fulltiming.

LuckyChow

I have my inverter inside the bus in an electrical closet.  The closet is vented and also contains two audio/visual fans thermostatically controlled.  These two fans are very quiet but the ones in the inverter are not.  This was mostly a necessity as transits aren't exactly overrun with under-the-floor storage space.  My AGM batteries are about 4 feet away in a seperate compartment. 

I don't really like the inverter inside, as its fans tend to come on during a battery charging event and they sound like a Cessna 150 during take off.  Likely each inverter brand would be different in this respect, but mine is too loud for my liking.  To minimize this, I installed a Progressive Dynamics 24V charger that has an extremely quiet internal fan.  I can't even hear it when it runs.  I keep the inverter's charger turned off and just let the PD charger maintain the batteries.  It has a 3 step charging program and doesn't boil my batteries. 
Darryl
Smyrna GA
2000 Gillig Phantom

bevans6

Mike, my generator also rides in the condenser bay.  the front half holds my Yamaha 3000 watt inverter generator, the rear half has the four batteries.  It all fits perfectly.  If I am going to run the generator for more than a half hour or so I open the door and turn it sideways to point the exhaust outside better, and to let it get more cooling air.  Not perfect, but it's what I have.

Brian
1980 MCI MC-5C, 8V-71T from a M-110 self propelled howitzer
Allison MT-647
Tatamagouche, Nova Scotia

belfert

I've noticed that my inverter fans will sometimes come on if the bay gets warm inside and power is only passing through the inverter.  (It is not charging nor inverting.)
Brian Elfert - 1995 Dina Viaggio 1000 Series 60/B500 - 75% done but usable - Minneapolis, MN

Brett G

HI Mike, early this summer I finished upgrading my electrical.  My system was based on Brian's.  (Thanks Brian)  It's SOOOOO nice compared what I had before. It wasn't cheap but well worth it. It's amazing how much less I use the generator now.  I've got a 10K Onan diesel gen.  If that thing takes a dump, I'll replace it with something a lot smaller, which means less expensive.  I can only do that because of the nice setup I've got now with the inverter and batteries.  8, 6 volt Golf cart batteries from Sams.  4000 watt, 24 volt Magnum Inverter charger.  I run the front air conditioner off the inverter when I go down the road.  The bus alternator charges the batteries as we travel.  Man I wish this site could handle decent multimedia.  I'm not going to piss around with changing the resolution on the photos so that's why I'm posting links.  

The Setup: https://docs.google.com/drawings/d/1Us02X_ZduDrJoGBe2yOWzcjrVVp0puUTW0Kp-LTj9J8/edit?usp=sharing

Inverter in the front bay and the battery bank just forward of that in the old condenser bay. I've got a fan that is hooked to a switch right above the driver's seat that I turn on when we are going down the road.  The fan is pointed right at the inverter to help it cool.  I've touched the outside of inverter after many hours of use and can't feel anything warm.  Personally I'm happy that the inverter and sub panel are under the bus.  So what if you need to reset a breaker once every 2 years.  If it's more than that you really aren't paying attention, right?  Of course you can't control what others are doing.  https://goo.gl/photos/tgsPyeXYeYfzwHG18

And because I love it when other people post pictures of any sort.  https://goo.gl/photos/2bfR42xUNvAYpP6T8

 







Brett
1970 MCI MC7 Challenger
8v71 / HT70 Allison
Goodhue MN
Our Bus http://goo.gl/zmk9M9

bevans6

Comments for Brett - I would put a switch in the ground connection to the Vanner, so you can turn it off.  I would probably not use fuses in the cable to the start batteries, so that if you need to use the house bank to start the bus the inrush current to the starter motor doesn't risk blowing the fuse.  My battery switch is a combiner, so that I can turn power to the inverter completely off if I want to.  I have off, house bank, or house plus starter bank.  I also love the bus pictures!

Brian
1980 MCI MC-5C, 8V-71T from a M-110 self propelled howitzer
Allison MT-647
Tatamagouche, Nova Scotia

goldgiter

I have an 85 Eagle and want to put my batteries in the area where the bus ac was located and my inverter in the bay in front of the tag axel.
I was wondering if that would be too far apart!
Sorry for highjacking this thread but I felt it was relevant.

Wes
85 Eagle Model 10
Timmonsville SC
2 miles from I 95/ I 20 intersection