An electric kettle pulls about 2,000 W while it boils. In a sailboat it uses about 200 Wh a day. Wattonomy sizes the battery (2.56 kWh), the solar (200 W) and every cable around it to ABYC E-11, then hands you the wiring diagram and a shoppable parts list.
Wire & fuse sizes follow ABYC E-11 — each conductor carries its fuse and stays under a 3% voltage drop.
An electric kettle pulls about 2,000 W flat out. It is brief, but the inverter and cable have to carry that load cleanly every single boil. Wattonomy sizes the bank, solar and every cable around it, to ABYC E-11.
Real numbers from a sized sailboat build, not rules of thumb.
About 200 Wh a day for the electric kettle itself, the figure everything else is sized from.
About 2.56 kWh of LiFePO4 (roughly 213 Ah at 12V) to carry it through the night and a cloudy day.
About 200 W of panel replaces a day’s use in fair sun; poor light or winter wants more, or a second charging source.
Sized to start the 2000 W surge cleanly: MultiPlus-II 12/3000 120V, with cable to match, to ABYC E-11.
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An electric kettle runs at about 2000 W and can surge to roughly 2000 W on start-up, using around 200 Wh over a day. The inverter has to cover that surge, not just the running watts.
For this build Wattonomy sizes about 2.56 kWh (roughly 213 Ah at 12V) of LiFePO4 — enough to carry the electric kettle plus your basics through the night and a cloudy day. Your exact number depends on how many days of backup you want.
About 200 W of panel replaces a day’s use in fair sun; poor light, winter or shade wants more, or a second charging source such as a DC-DC charger off the engine. The tool sizes it from your climate.
Yes. Every cable, fuse and busbar is sized to ABYC E-11 using AWG, at the 12/24V DC and 120V AC typical of the US systems. Nothing here is a rule of thumb.
Plain version: these are the recognized rulebooks your design is sized against, so the numbers hold up to a surveyor, an inspector or an insurer.
Wattonomy applies these standards in its calculations. It is not certified, sponsored or endorsed by ABYC, ISO, NFPA or Victron — it sizes your design to meet what they require, and shows the working.
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