Hi all, My first post on the forum. Here are my thoughts and is this going to work.
So when going down the road with Tab in tow it is connected to the TV via the 12V connector which applies the breaks and charges the battery. When parked boondocking I would like to connect the Pecron to the trailer for power. Pretty much everything in the Tab runs on 12V. This would give me a lot of reserve power to the trailer. I could just plug in the Onshore power cable, but then the Pecron needs to use the inverter to 110V which then goes to the Tab which converts it back to 12V to be used inside. This is inefficient. I would rather connect the output 12V from the Pecron to the Pigtail. It would be like being connected to the TV, and will keep the TAB Battery charged also.
Good idea? Bad Idea? what would I need to be aware of and possibly modify if necessary? I've been thinking about this for days and cannot find any reason to not do it. What am I missing? The Pecron can put out 12V, 10 Amps. via the cigar output socket.
2018 Tab 400 / 2015 ford F-150 2.7 EB
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One minor nitpick: the 12V from the tow vehicle does not power the brakes, there is a separate pin for the brake that has varying voltage depending on how much braking is needed.
I have connected a Noco 10 battery charger from my Goal Zero (110v outlet) to the solar ports on the Tab. I'm losing some power at the GZ inverter, but at least the Tab's converter is not involved, and the Noco is regulating the charge to the battery.
2023 Tab 400 / 2022 F150 XLT Sport 3.5EB
Traded in - 2018 T@B 320 S/2019 Toyota 4Runner SR5
Another option is upgrading the TaB battery to two 100-amp Lithium batteries, and adding portable solar panels, or if you have the Pecron 2000 kit, add the SAE port connected to a Victron 75/15 controller and use the portable solar panel kit that comes with the Pecron 2000 kit, and use the Pecron as a stand alone unit to provide additional power to external devices you bing camping.
Cheers
Then use your Perron 2000 to run your computer and data equipment, and the lithium battery upgrade to run the TaB’s systems. We have camped boondocking for 4 days on 200 amps of AGM batter using the roof mounted 200 watts of solar panels, using the TaB fridge and Alde heating system. The 200-watt Solar had the 200-amp AGM battery back to full charge by midday with the panels in partial shade pet of the time. Standard practice is to have at least 100-watts of Solar per each 100 amps of battery as a minimum. Increasing that, as you have done, will give you faster charging up to a point.
https://tab-rv.vanillacommunity.com/discussion/12681/use-7-pin-connector-for-solar-suitcase