skipmac
Well-Known Member
Skip, I have a 1-2-both switch at the moment. I wanted to do away with this as 1, it could have come from the QE2 it's so hugh and 2, with the ACR I shouldn't have to worry about switching (or not) batteries to charge them, let alone leaving them combined and draining them. I imagine the "cube" fuses should protect me from combining to a shorted battery.
If the size of the battery switch is a concern Blue Sea makes a smaller one, less than 3" square. https://www.bluesea.com/products/6007200/m-Series_Mini_Selector_Battery_Switch_-_Black
If by cube fuses you mean these https://www.bluesea.com/products/5191/MRBF_Terminal_Fuse_Block_-_30_to_300A
they are great products. I have them on all my battery banks. If you have one on both start and house battery banks that will protect you from the risk of dumping full battery power from one bank into a shorted battery in the other, however that will not prevent a discharged (but not shorted) battery from draining a good battery if you combine them to start the engine. Basically the charged battery will be sending as much or more power to the dead battery as it would to the starter.
So what are the thoughts on the ACR/Solar Controller. Both on starter battery (I think I would like to keep the starter battery topped up) or altenator on starter and solar on house as the ACR will flip between the two? What happens if I'm running the engine on a sunny day, will the ACR cope sensing a charge from both sides at the same time? I assume it'll just link the batteries and they will absorb whatever charge they need.
Tom
Using the ACR or a similar device is, in my humble opinion, the simplest, most foolproof way to keep all batteries charged while keeping the start battery isolated and protected from accidental discharge for house loads so you always have a charged start battery. However, the way to do it.
ALL charging sources go to one place, the house batteries. Here's why.
- Simplifies charge control
- Simplifies wiring
- Whenever there is charging voltage to the house battery the start battery will automatically be charged as well so it will always be topped off.
- The start battery, unless you have a really, really bad engine problem and crank the engine repeatedly for a long time, is only discharged a tiny amount in charging, something on the order of 5 amp hours in a typical small boat. On the other hand, using house batteries for lights, fridge, anchor windlass, anchor lights, stereo or what have you could use 50 or 100 amp hours. So which battery needs to get the most charge on a regular basis?
