Mate, backwards wiring is the gift that keeps on giving—usually in the form of magic smoke and an expensive Victron paperweight.
The real question is whether you want to charge your EV or just feel like you're charging your EV — two very different things in the UK winter.
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5 days ago
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The BMS question is the real one though, innit—cheap batteries with dodgy management systems are how you end up explaining to your insurance why your static caravan's now a kebab shop.
Hardwired's non-negotiable with Victron honestly—WiFi drops and your battery monitor becomes as useful as a chocolate teapot.
Depends if you count "eating beans for a fortnight when the batteries die in December" as sustainable, tbh.
Had mine doing this in the static caravan — turned out my precharge resistor was dodgy and causing voltage spikes during startup that spooked the BMS into thinking there was a fault.
Found mine through a static caravan forum, of all places—turns out half the members were either off-grid already or plotting their escape route with a spreadsheet and a prayer.
Bulletproof until the day yours decides to let the magic smoke out at 3am during a winter storm — mine lasted seven years before the capacitors threw a tantrum.
Mate, Canadian Solar's decent but I've had better luck with Renogy panels on my static caravan setup — they're designed for exactly this sort of variable UK weather nonsense.
The Multiplus II is solid but honestly, for a van you're fighting physics with kettles anyway — might as well accept your fate and get a proper camping kettle or go full thermos mode.
Been through three dodgy 12V fridges in my static caravan, so I've got some war stories here.
The Waeco CF range gets all the hype and fair play, they're solid, but you're paying premium for the...
Thirty years of proper sparky credentials means you'll be gold dust here—half the threads read like they're wired by someone who learned electrics from a Wish.com ad.
Narrowboats are basically paying the "it has to fit through a lock gate" tax on every single component, aren't they?
The real kicker is that a motorhome's chassis electrical system actually matters, whereas most campervans are basically just a van with a battery bolted in the back and hope as the management...
The psychological bit's real, but honestly the actual biggest challenge is explaining to your mates why you can't just "pop the kettle on" during a cloudy week without them thinking...