help electrician car batteries to run your ballasts

jbigdawg79

Well-Known Member
ok i know this sounds stupid but i heard of a guy that is using car batteries to run his ballasts. then only using a battery charger twice a week to recharge the batteries can an electrician help me out here. hes using 1 die hard battery per ballast and then just recharging them is anyone else doing this. i am hearing his electric bill is being cut in half because he is just paying for recharge time and his fans any help would be appreciated thanks
 

ooli

Active Member
Ummm, I'm not sure, but I think you could set up a few batteries(depending on your needs) connected to power inverters and run your set up off that. Then you'd be able to charge it whenever. I saw a guy running his entire pole-barn workshop this way.

~ooli~
 

aficionado

Active Member
Ok folks - think about this.

Your equipment will need electricity to run, regardless of where it gets it from. Plugging in directly to the wall, it will use an amount or if you plug into a bank of batteries, it will draw the same amount.

If you hook it all up to car batteries it will also need a different current type. DC vs. AC that comes out of your wall, and AC is what your ballast will use.

In both scenarios, the one thing that does NOT change is how much power you need. Plugging it right into the wall is simple, and easiest. Using batteries requires that you convert the power to AC, and then recharge the battery cells (with the power from the wall). You lose some power in the conversion and the recharging process as it is never 100% efficient.

In summary - running your equipment on batteries will not mean you use less power. In fact you will use MORE since you lose the overhead needed to charge the batteries and convert the power. Not to mention the cost of the battery, and the fact that car batteries are not intended for long term and sustained draws. Now unless you are paying a different rate for your power at different times of the day (and even that is a stretch), this makes absolutely no sense to go this route in hopes of saving money.
 

rd116

Well-Known Member
you will have to convert your 12v DC battery to 120v AC. You could buy a inverter made for a car, wire it directly to your battery. Then just plug your ballast into the inverter. I do not knw how often you will have to charge your battery tho...

Link your battery directly to a cigarette lighter plug in, something like this:
http://www.12voltsplus.com/Convenience-RPPS_16ES_Road_Pro_12_Volt_Extension_Power_Cord_with_Cigarette_Lighter_Socket-P449.aspx

Then plug the inverter into the lighter and the ballast to the inverter (or timer for 12/12):
http://www.walmart.com/search/search-ng.do?search_query=Power+Inverters&search_constraint=3944&tc=0&ic=48_0&ref=+125875.126086&tab_value=29_All&fromPageCatId=3947&catNavId=3947
 

kevin

Well-Known Member
in big trucks they run inverters and with the truck not running it would zap the batterys in less than 24 hours with just a dorm sized fridge and an alarm clock. they have a lot more battrery than 1 die hard too. so i'm thinking the battery charger would be running full time
 
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