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Tim wrote:
John, yes...it IS fun. takes away from the humdrum of typical shop work. it's relaxing actually, to work on this boat. Especially seeing I'm in the Auto-Electric business, I get my stuff wholsale.. LOL! Even though this additional electrical stuff didn't really need to be done, (except for the bat. isolator, and a bit of freshening up) I'm likeing putting it to the way I want. I thought something was a bit odd, when I was looking around the engine ont he Monarch. Somebody ahd swapped out the alternator with an earlier non-integeral regulated Prestolite! GAG! I hate those things! The origional Motorola probably went south, and so someone took this off an older boat that was equipped with OMC. OMC used a bunch of goofy engine combinations and for some unknown reason, chose Prestolite to be their electrical supplier. Not really hard to work on, but parts are becoming scarce and expensive. Whoever wired this thing in, I commend them on their genius of "rigging". I will say they did a neat job, And they also did something I'[ve done before like in the "old days" of converting old 6 volt generator'd tractors over to an 12v alternator system. is the Pos. wire attached to the back of the alt. to the output stud as usual. but instead of using the stock volt regulator. somebody used a Volt. reg for a '66 Dodge. Yep! "LeDodge!" They're cool. the little matchbox VR is so simple, one wire from the VR goes to the alternator "Field terminal" and the other side of the VR goes to the key switch. About as simple as you can get, and cheap "riggings" too! But thats OK. With a tear of grattitude, in the barrel it went and got replaced with a homebuilt 90A 12SI Delco! Oh yes, I DO install the spark arresting screens. I thought, well, while I'm here, I thought to myself. Eh, Pull the starter. So, down I go with wrench's and rachet in hand and pulled the heavy beast off. "That's what I thought... Low-torque POS!!! " So, to the shelf I go and get a new permanent magnet (PMGR) 260 Delcostarter which weight about a thrid as the origional, and has over 50% more cranking speed and torque. Grab retro-bolt kit housing gasket (to compensate and fill in for the smaller nose in the larger flywheel bellhousing opening), and installed the new starter with ease. A whole lot easier than taking the other one off. The old Starter was "OK, but needed some lube , brush's and bushings. and the brush springs were about rotted off, but not a big deal, but I hitt the key on the new one, and it cranked so much better! I knew it would crank better than the old one's wildest dreams. I love it! Hmm time to investigate the other battery. I found out why there wasn't an auxillary battery in the other battery box. Why no Aux. battery? Because the battery isolator was bad....figures! I never liked them either, I always thought it was an odd way of doing things. So... the isolator becomes surgically extracted. And I make my own. I lilke mine better. "Run" battery pos. terminal Cabled to starter Solonoid. neg. terminal to engine block., 10 guage wire from Starter solonoid battery terminal to Alternator output stud. (Typical, and simple), Next. Auxillary Battery pos. running through a Motorola isolation diode plate , with 3 press fit diodes with 50a.ea. rating, (pulled off a junker John Deere combine alternator) bridged in between "Run" battery pos(via. 10 ga., and "aux" battery pos. ."Aux" battery neg. to engine block(via 10ga). Really simple. Only drawback is there is a slight voltage drop on the aux. battery charging due to natural inefficiencies in the diodes. So instead of the 14.-14.2 v that the "Run is getting" the "aux" will suffer at 13.5-13.8 v. boohoo. plenty to keep lights, radio, kids DVD, etc working for hrs. and no drain on the "run" bat. And if the "aux" is drained it should re- charge with no problems. So, until the Pertoronix electronic ignition kit comes in, I gurss I'll get back to working on the cuddy interior. man, I like doing stuff like this! JohnH wrote: And it sounds like you've got a good handle on what you're doing! Tim, I think you have a small problem . . . So you've got the Aux battery fed off the engine battery via a diode. This means that any load on the Aux battery will drain *BOTH* batteries as if the Aux is lower than the engine current flows through the diode. *NOT* what you wanted. If you want to make this work, you'd need to reverse your isolator diode plate and take the alternator output direct to the Aux battery. Why not fit a combiner? either a commercial offering or 'roll your own'. On our small yacht we have a 'rool your own' combiner consisting of a pair of 40A relays in parallel (I was too cheap to get a proper 70A relay) protected by a 70A fuse. It joins the +ve terminals of the Engine and Aux batteries but only when the Alternator warning light goes out. There is a simple circuit with a power transistor connected to the warning light terminal of the alternator to drive the relay coil. This is because if the relay coil was connected direct to the warning lamp, the lamp will never go out properly. There is also a switch to let me select Auto, Off or Forced. In the usual Auto position, the relay cuts in when the engine key switch is on and the alternator charge warning light has gone out. It drops out again as soon as the charge light comes on when you stop the engine. Its been running all this year with no trouble. We put the Aux battery switch on when we go down the boat and turn it off when we lock up and go home. The engine battery switch gets turned on when I open the engine seacock and off again when I close it. Apart from that, we never need to touch the switches and even with a 12V peltier fridge, we never have a flat engine battery. The whole setup is 'fit and forget'. This topic has been done to death on uk.rec.waterways over the years A search on google groups of that group with the phrase "split charging" would be worth it for you. -- Ian Malcolm. London, ENGLAND. (NEWSGROUP REPLY PREFERRED) ianm[at]the[dash]malcolms[dot]freeserve[dot]co[dot]uk [at]=@, [dash]=- & [dot]=. *Warning* HTML & 32K emails -- NUL: 'Stingo' Albacore #1554 - 15' Early 60's, Uffa Fox designed, All varnished hot moulded wooden racing dinghy. |
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