fuss
Well-Known Member
I have a 70 amp isolating diode connected to my house battery and no other. I use the isolater solely so that no power is at the alternator when everything is off, for safety reasons. This way the always live cable runs are very short and the alternator can never be accidently disconnected from the battery.
This means that one of the diodes is not used.
If I bridge this to the other diode then the current can flow from the alternator through both theoretically.
Would this then mean that the isolating diode could handle 140a instead of the rated 70 amp?
Thanks
John
This means that one of the diodes is not used.
If I bridge this to the other diode then the current can flow from the alternator through both theoretically.
Would this then mean that the isolating diode could handle 140a instead of the rated 70 amp?
Thanks
John