Amulet
Well-Known Member
Not sure I understand. I have a single shunt and monitor on the negative side of each of my two battery banks. All current in and out flows through the shunt irrespective of which charging source it comes from. It therefore integrates all input and output including Amp Hours in and out, and displays it on the monitor. The only weakness is that, if I want to know, say, what my sterling charger, my fridge or my masthead light is providing/consuming I have to switch them off and see what difference it makes to the amps to the battery. Both my sterling and my engine have intelligent three-stage regulators, which basically means that which ever is most enthusiastic gets to do the charging if both are on (rare) and the battery bank is so near the top of its charge that it doesn't suck charge from both. Never failed me and my batteries seem to last for ever.I am glad its worked for you, but a battery monitor is much more useful if it can display and integrate the value of all the shunts.
This way you can get a net A in or out as well as AHrs in or out.
A single battery monitor with the capicity to deal with the shunts you require is usually a better choice.
If it can be integrated with the regulators to provide intelligent charge termination that is even better, but this is a more sophisticated system than the OP needs.
But I agree, the OP doesn't want to faff with all this nonsense.