A Starlink dish runs continuously and pulls more than a laptop. In a campervan in Australia it uses about 1000 Wh a day. Wattonomy sizes the battery (5.12 kWh), the solar (600 W) and every cable around it to AS/NZS 3008, then hands you the wiring diagram and a shoppable parts list.
Wire & fuse sizes follow AS/NZS 3008 — each conductor carries its fuse and stays under a 3% voltage drop.
Starlink runs continuously, so it is often the biggest single draw in a small build. An undersized bank drops it offline overnight, just when you want it. Wattonomy sizes the bank, solar and every cable around it, to AS/NZS 3008.
Real numbers from a sized campervan build for Australia, not rules of thumb.
About 1000 Wh a day for the Starlink dish itself, the figure everything else is sized from.
About 5.12 kWh of LiFePO4 (roughly 427 Ah at 12V) to carry it through the night and a cloudy day.
About 600 W of panel replaces a day’s use in fair sun; poor light or winter wants more, or a second charging source.
Every conductor sized to carry its fuse, with the voltage drop checked, to AS/NZS 3008.
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A Starlink dish draws about 50 W when running, and because it runs much of the day it uses around 1000 Wh. Wattonomy sizes from your real figure, not a rule of thumb.
For this build Wattonomy sizes about 5.12 kWh (roughly 427 Ah at 12V) of LiFePO4 — enough to carry the Starlink dish plus your basics through the night and a cloudy day. Your exact number depends on how many days of backup you want.
About 600 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 AS/NZS 3008 using mm², at the 12/24V DC and 230V AC typical of Australia 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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