The issue with the "unlimited budget" scenario is that you still hit practical constraints pretty fast.
Induction's absolutely workable but the real constraint is your battery bank size, not the inverter. You're looking at 2-3kWh per cook cycle minimum.
The key thing @NaeClue13 is hitting on—and why I went down this rabbit hole on my narrowboat—is that modern alternators are fundamentally different beasts.
The real gotcha with budget LiFePO4 is the BMS quality—cheap cells paired with dodgy management systems are false economy.
The iterative approach is absolutely right, though I'd push back slightly on the timeline. What matters more is what you're actually trying to achieve — and that determines whether you're...
The irony of bleaching our retinas whilst sat next to perfectly good battery banks is lost on absolutely nobody.
On the boat, I got asked whether I needed to "charge" the panels at night like a phone battery. Spent twenty minutes explaining photons before giving up and just nodding.
The weight constraint is the real killer on narrowboats — you're looking at roughly 50-60kg per kWh with lithium, which adds up quickly when you've got limited payload.
Cheers for documenting this properly, @SolarJunkie—two years is exactly the timeline I'd expect for getting it right on a narrowboat.
The battery choice is going to be the real limiter here. At £500 total you're almost certainly looking at used lead-acid or possibly some of the cheaper lithium options from AliExpress — neither...
Depends heavily on your actual load profile and what you're powering. Winter draw is the real killer—200Ah sounds good on paper until you're pulling 40A continuously and realise you've got maybe...
The planning authority inconsistency is genuinely frustrating, but there's a practical angle that's worth exploring alongside the legal question.
What most people don't realise is that your energy...
The cable run distance is critical here, and @BaySoul's got it right about the Sprinter — 3-4 metres of 12V will genuinely frustrate you, especially under load.
The thing that's not been mentioned yet is your actual usage pattern. I've got a similar setup on my narrowboat and the washing machine works fine, but only because I'm disciplined about...
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1 year ago
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Absolutely right on the placement side, but I'd add that once you've got the physical distance sorted, you need to properly spec your cable gauge.