M- lived on my boat for most of a decade in the Caribbean. Don’t know about Greece but do know the logistics of getting stuff, especially batteries, is problematic in the windwards.. I wanted to swap out lifelines for Li but couldn’t find a boat electrician I trusted enough to help spec’ing the system and helping with the installation. Then decided to flip to firefly but although I felt confident to DYI between import and shipping and hassles with brokers decided to just replace the flooded Pb the boat came with from China with the lifelines. We ran the genset once a month to exercise it. For those occasions had to scramble to find enough loads. (AC, vacuum the boat, make water, charge power tools etc.) We had 1020 of lifelines, two solar panels, two D400 wind generators.
Logistics is luckily no problem for me. It is fairly easy to get parts in Greece, takes maximum 2 days. The more expensive stuff I bring with my van from all over Europe. I did change the batteries in March, put in 6 brand new 280 Ah AGM's (which I had bought in the Netherlands) so that I would be able to have enough power during the summer. They were about half the price I would have to pay for them in Greece, so that was an easy decision. Loaded the van up with other parts and tools, then drove to Greece.
Since they were working on the engines they needed to have the boat under power all the time, which meant it was connected to shore power. In Greece all the marina's are changing from post paid to pre paid electricity, but............the max you can put in is 50 euro. For that amount you will get about 60 Kw of electricity. The marina promised me they would put a new card in as soon as the first one was finished, but obviously they completely forgot. Result is that all the batteries were drained completely, so when I came back every single battery on board was dead. That was a 5000 euro damage and the marina stuck up their middle finger.
And this was the second time they destroyed all the batteries, first time was done by one of their employees who decided to switch on the bilge pumps and did not switch them off again. A float switch had failed, so the bilge pump kept running and in the end drained all the batteries. That was the reason why I had to replace the batteries in March to begin with.
So I will need to change everything again and the reason for lithium is the higher discharge they can take. Also, the amount of space required to upgrade lithium to 24 V as compared to AGM to 24 V is almost half. Nowadays you can buy Winston cells and they are much higher than your standard AGM battery. They are also much easier to handle. On top of that, if one cell fails, you simply buy a new cell, not a complete battery.
But the trick is low usage. Watermaker was a Spectra Cape Horn Extreme a DC unit. Rare AC usage with good natural ventilation and shade coverings. Propane cooking. All LED lights. Etc.
Unless I start exchanging all the equipment on board to 12 or 24 V equipment I have a constant discharge of around 500 W at 220 V, which is around 20 A at 24 V or 40 A at 12 V. The former owner simply installed all 220 V equipment and changing everything is going to cost about 30.000 - 40.000 euro and then I still have the battery capacity problem.
Once I start adding equipment as airco, washing machine, dish washer, TV, stereo, watermaker etc the discharge will go up even further. If I would run 1 airco at night we would have a charge of about 50 Ah (24 V) extra. According to my calculations I will need about 700 Ah at 24 V per night maximum. With only 70 % of the capacity available I need a minimum battery capacity of 1000 Ah at 24 V. At 12 V that would double and with AGM it would triple. And that is where the problem starts, because I have no space to put so many AGM batteries.
If your Li batteries (or more likely the ancillaries) fail in remote places you’ll be out of luck. If you can’t figure it out finding a tech locally who can maybe difficult. For a cruiser KISS (keep it simple stupid). You want low tech systems easily understood and diagnosed. You want systems in common usage where parts and service are available.
Luckily it is fairly easy to get a hold of a new Winston Cell and they are being sold in Greece / Croatia as well. Victron is from my homecountry, so easy contacts there and since I will be installing the system myself I will be able to do simple maintenance myself. For bigger problems I can always refer to the many reps these companies have in Greece and Croatia. And as stated, spare parts are readily available.
Would note the following
Rapid acceptance rate of Li is meaningless to most cruisers. Your solar and wind are low (but constant) producers . They won’t exceed the acceptance rate of Pb or carbon.
We kept our batteries at 80-100% most of the time and never went below 70%. After 8 years load testing showed the lowest (engine start) to be at 87%.
For a displacement hull or even SD weight saving isn’t that big a deal. In fact have acquaintances who went Li and then needed to glass in Pb to restore trim.
You will not recover expense at time of sale. The technology will have moved on and it will be antiquated.
In your shoes (and I was in similar) I would add sufficient batteries and alt energy charging so that their service life was excellent and usage was unrestricted. My preference would be carbon fireflies which insurance companies have no issues with and don’t require a massive rewiring. If not readily available in your new cruising grounds then AGMs( like lifelines which can be equalized).
One of the reasons is that I can change over to lithium for a fraction of the cost of what you would pay in the US. I will pay exactly 1/5 of the price they normally cost. The importer of the Winston Cells is located in Czech republic and they have a factory outlet. Since I have a van I can go there, pick them up, export them out of the EU into Montenegro, which means I will get 24 % VAT back again. And in Montenegro they won't charge VAT since the system is going on a boat which is not registered in Montenegro.
If I would have to pay full price I would be looking at a 100.000 euro conversion, now I am looking at about 20.000 euro total (lithiums, new inverters, bms etc plus the solar panels). If I compare that to exchanging all my 220 V equipment on board I basically save 50 %. So that is one added reason for lithiums.
Another reason is that lithiums can handle the higher ER temperatures, AGM's cannot. AGM's function well in 20 degrees Celsius, but if you store them in temps of 40- 50 or even 60 degrees you reduce their lifespan drastically. They could go from a 7 year lifespan to only 2 years.
I agree that I won't be able to recoup the money at all, but that is also not my goal. I got the boat well below market value, so if I keep the boat in good condition by investing in it I will still have spent only market value and the boat being that old is not likely going to drop much lower. I am somewhat older than my wife, who is Mediterranean and once I am dead she can keep the boat in her family for many more years to come. She is also fully licensed, as well are other members of her family. If all goes well the boat won't be on the market for at least 20 or 30 years............as long as the boat is well maintained.
People here seem to not like wind generators. In the winter in the Caribbean windwards I got more from the wind generators than the solar. Wind is 24/7/365 there. Solar isn’t. In the summers in New England got more from the solar. Fatty had the same experience. Don’t know wind patterns in Greece but if you get reasonable wind (10knots) think your experience will be similar. The D400s are nearly noiseless. Used bowling alley wax on the blades once a year. Otherwise no maintenance. Spent a little time getting blades perfectly balanced so no issues with bearings.
Unfortunately wind is limited in Greece and Croatia. Greece has a bit more wind than Croatia, but most nights and early mornings are dead calm. In the afternoon the wind picks up, but usually that is max 15 kts for about 5 to 6 hours. In wintertime there is more wind, but then we will not be on the boat.
[/QUOTE]My current boat has a high output AC driven watermaker. Thinking of going back to DC. Then my existing solar is sufficient to run it. My current boat has a SeaKeeper so I’m stuck with generator runs. It’s a Onan. When it dies will replace with a slightly smaller Northernlights. I have a mix of golf cart (for house bank) and AGMs (all starts and both thrusters). Will flip to flyfires as I have a two degree list to the side the house bank is on when they die. So the weight saving and getting down to 20% is meaningful.
Your experience with the AGMs could happen with Li. If it occurred with Li would be a even greater financial hit. We’re mom and pop cruisers. We’ve been in areas where yards are few and far between and the technical support very limited. Sounds like you’re looking at similar. In that case avoid anything that hasn’t gained massive general use or requires sophisticated knowledge. People forget you’re on a power boat. It has a alternator that runs every time you move. It will get you through bulk and probably absorb every time you move. Your alt energy will get you through float to 100% at least once a week if you’re actively cruising. Li is a great technology and will dominate the market. But at present for a cruiser looking at refit the advantages aren’t usually applicable enough to justify the downsides.[/QUOTE]
You are right about the risk of having the same happening with Li as what happened with the AGM's.
I think it was a very unfortunate combination of factors, because if the work on the engines would not have been necessary the boat would have been disconnected from shore power and solar would have kept the batteries charged, the whole thing with the AGM's would have never happened.
The marinas changing from post paid to pre paid is going to open up a can of worms for them, since their responsibilities now become much bigger. They don't want to accept it, but when you limit the amount of pre paid electricity someone can buy you know you are going to run into troubles in the long run. It won't take long before they start figuring that one out.
As for us starting from 2023 we will be more or less living on the boat and I already made a decision that no work on the boat will be done anymore without me being present. I don't want situations again where batteries don't get charged, but at the same time equipment is draining them.
Also, I will expand the total solar capacity to 3 - 4.5 Kwp, which will be more than sufficient to keep the batteries charged. In winter time I can then put covers over most of them to reduce the produced Kwp.
Idea is also to haul the boat out every winter, put her on the dry and then she can be plugged in on a trickle charge.
What happened now with the double destruction of all the batteries is most likely not going to happen again...............(famous last words).