Sailfree
Well-Known Member
My Engine battery has gone flat over the winter and I can't understand how it ever got a charge from the mains battery charger. The charger has provision for more than one bank of batteries but only the service batteries are connected to it.
Adjacent to the engine there is an "isolator" (manual name - looks like a blocking diode to me) allowing the alternator to charge both battery banks yet keeping them separate. Is this isolator clever and lets a 14V charging current from the Service batteries through to also charge the Engine battery yet stop the Engine battery discharging back to the Service batteries or does it only allow the alternator to charge both? The charging circuit diagram in the manual only shows the mains charger connected to the service battery.
At present if it was meant to be clever (and thats the way the engine battery was intended to get its charge) it no longer is! so possibly a burnt out circuit inside the isolator.
The boat is 2 years old and was regularly used last winter so its possible the engine battery got enough charge from the engine so never went flat.
<hr width=100% size=1>
Adjacent to the engine there is an "isolator" (manual name - looks like a blocking diode to me) allowing the alternator to charge both battery banks yet keeping them separate. Is this isolator clever and lets a 14V charging current from the Service batteries through to also charge the Engine battery yet stop the Engine battery discharging back to the Service batteries or does it only allow the alternator to charge both? The charging circuit diagram in the manual only shows the mains charger connected to the service battery.
At present if it was meant to be clever (and thats the way the engine battery was intended to get its charge) it no longer is! so possibly a burnt out circuit inside the isolator.
The boat is 2 years old and was regularly used last winter so its possible the engine battery got enough charge from the engine so never went flat.
<hr width=100% size=1>