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Gary Warner wrote:
And my alternator has survived since 1991 with a Guest 1/2/off switch. My understanding is that what can kill an alternator is if the Alt is putting out power and you switch from, say, #1 to #2. At that moment when you switch there is no battery connected to the charging system to take the power thus creating a momentary surge in power. It's not a "momentary surge," it's a voltage spike attempting to reach infinite! From a Buddhist point of view this might be Nirvana but for the alternator regulating circuit it is a guaranteed trip to the afterlife ![]() ... Some switches are "make-before-break" so they make the connection to the #2 battery BEFORE breaking the connections to the #1. (or whichever way you are switching). But these better type switches can look exactly like the cheaper type. You have to check the part number (or study it's design and operation) to determine which type you have. Yes exactly. Bill's point about using one battery to buffer his electronics is also worth noting. We have a somewhat similar set-up but it's accomplished in the breaker panel. Doug King wrote Also, you don't mention it but are you putting in a hard wired charger? Definitely get & use a 3-stage smart charger no matter how you rig it. Gary Warner wrote: On such a smally boat with such low electrical draw and only weekend use do I really need/want a charger? Won't my generator take care of charging up the batteries? Depends on how you use the boat & generator... you've got a genset in a 22 footer? If true then you can skimp on the house banks, fer sure. Other question: I do have a good home based battery charger. It has both a full charge & trickle charge setting. But I see that trickly charging all winter is going to kill the battery. Yes, whereas a smart charger which has a third stage which "floats" the battery at a full-charge but less-than-charging voltage will greatly extend a battery's life; usually they also have a desulfating function. ... So are my choices are basically as follows ?? A: Charge it when taking it out, then leave it all winter B: Go to the shop every 2 or 4 weeks and charge it for a while C: Buy a "smart" or "float" charger and leave that running A trailer boat can be plugged in at home, whether the charger is wired in or kept on a shelf is a matter of convenience... I'd go for option "C" since that will pay for itself by extending the batteries working life and getting you underway with batteries at peak charge every time. And is it really OK to leave a smart charger running and connected to a battery for weeks at a time without checking on it? The thought of that just makes me a little nervous. It shouldn't. Of course it is a good idea to check the cells every couple weeks, but a smart charger will not boil them like a taper charger or trickle charger (which is basically a taper charger with very low amperage) will... I go several months without having to top mine up. Our boat had a large & expensive ferro-resonant taper charger (80 amps according to it's nameplate!!) wired in when we bought it... top of the line 1970's technology! But it consistently boiled off the batteries according to the previous owners maintenance log, and the previous owners were in the habit of buying new batteries every 18 ~ 24 months. Expensive! One of the first upgrades was a Xantrex smart charger, which we used to desulfate (or "condition") the old batteries... gave them a last hurrah... Fair Skies Doug King |
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