lw395
Well-Known Member
As any marine sparky will tell you (including me and Paul), they are nasty unreliable devices prone to failure
And the setup with a 1-2-both switch is not the same as the seperate isolator and bridging switch system that Paul, I and many others favour.
With a 1-2-both switch, you cannot isolate a faulty battery and run all the systems off either of the banks so if you're starter battery (for example) goes duff (and they do), if you switch to "Both" the domestic bank will start to discharge attempting to bring the voltage up on the engine battery.
The same applies if a battery starts to cook off - you want that battery isolated pronto and you can't do it with a 1-2-both switch and keep the boat electrics running. You end up having to switch off ALL the electrics then mess about disconnecting the boiling battery before you can turn everything back on
It's a bad system
Sorry most of that is just plain wrong.
A classic 1B2 system can switch off and isolate either battery leaving everything running on the other.
If your starter is 1 and it goes bad, you can switch to 2 and isolate it.