oak
Veteran Member
Miru is a 2007 Mainship pilot with a single yanmar 6lya 370.
My upgrade began with charging out the original pro mariner with a new pro mariner 1250/ 50 amp charger. While doing that I replaced the inline ceramic 60 amp fuses with 60 amp resettable breakers. With the ceramic breakers it is not possible to easily tell if the fuse has blown. If a breaker trips it’s apparent. I also added a remote for the battery charger and installed it in the cabin adjacent to the house panel. The remote indicates all charging functions.
The original battery set up on the pilot has three banks. The first for the generator is a group 24, the second for the house and main engine is a 8D, the third bank is for the bow and stern thrusters. Each bank is individually connected to an on/off switch, with no way to parallel. I didn’t think it was good planning to have the house and engine start on the same battery, so I moved the engine start to the thruster battery. My thought was that they are all motors and the thrusters are only used with the main engine running.
Next I removed the original Charles battery combiner and installed a blue sea ML-ACR. The ACR can now parallel the house and engine/ thrusters either manually or automatically. The ACR also has a remote control switch that was installed at the helm.
To complete the system I installed a blue sea M-2 state of charge monitor at the helm. The M-2 monitors the voltage of all three batteries and the state of charge for the house bank. The battery information is a vast improvement over the analog meter on the house panel.
My upgrade began with charging out the original pro mariner with a new pro mariner 1250/ 50 amp charger. While doing that I replaced the inline ceramic 60 amp fuses with 60 amp resettable breakers. With the ceramic breakers it is not possible to easily tell if the fuse has blown. If a breaker trips it’s apparent. I also added a remote for the battery charger and installed it in the cabin adjacent to the house panel. The remote indicates all charging functions.
The original battery set up on the pilot has three banks. The first for the generator is a group 24, the second for the house and main engine is a 8D, the third bank is for the bow and stern thrusters. Each bank is individually connected to an on/off switch, with no way to parallel. I didn’t think it was good planning to have the house and engine start on the same battery, so I moved the engine start to the thruster battery. My thought was that they are all motors and the thrusters are only used with the main engine running.
Next I removed the original Charles battery combiner and installed a blue sea ML-ACR. The ACR can now parallel the house and engine/ thrusters either manually or automatically. The ACR also has a remote control switch that was installed at the helm.
To complete the system I installed a blue sea M-2 state of charge monitor at the helm. The M-2 monitors the voltage of all three batteries and the state of charge for the house bank. The battery information is a vast improvement over the analog meter on the house panel.