I'll get me coat.

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nicq wrote:Not really the alt output is 65 amp poss 10 to run engine 55 left split between 2 batts one just started the engine the other run for van leisure chances are it will never blow as both req a good charge.
Mocki wrote:Yes, my point exactly, it should be connected to a relay that works the same as a split charge, NOT to the split charge relay.
which is how mine is rigged by autosleeper, except the trigger is able to be switched offCalifornia Dreamin wrote: or I suppose you could spur the same trigger wire used on the split charge relay upto a separate fridge relay.
RedGus wrote:Sorry to labour the point, but battery charging doesn't really work like that. Once the engine has started, the relay connects the two batteries together, so they are acting as a paralleled bank. For example, if you have a 60AH starter battery and a 60AH leisure, once the relay energises you effectively have a 120AH bank of batteries. The way that lead acid batteries under charge work is that they are self-limiting for charge rate. So, if you have two in parallel, and one is moderately discharged (usually the starter) and the other heavily discharged, you will have a situation where the heavily discharged battery will be taking almost all of the available charge. This means that you may well find a situation where the charge required by the battery is everything that the alternator can supply. The only reason to have a fuse in the circuit is to protect the wiring or the components from being damaged by a current that is too high. If your cable between the two batteries is correctly sized, it really doesn't make sense to use a 70A relay, then fuse the cable at 30A when there is a potential charge current of 55-65A. After all, isn't the main aim to charge the batteries with all that the alternator has to offer, as quickly as possible?
I'll get me coat.
RedGus wrote:At the risk of turning this into a rather more complex thread than the OP perhaps intended with the "warm relay" question, there are a few things to add to the post from California Dreaming above. The problem with charging leisure batteries from a vehicle alternator really stems from the fact that 1) the original alternator is designed simply to replace the small amount of charge used to start the engine, drawn from a battery at a high state of charge. Leisure batteries get much more highly depleted in use, so require a different charging regime, as CD says. Where I beg to differ slightly from what you say, CD, is that the voltages you referenced are for a battery which is off-charge and under no load. In practice, as soon as the engine starts, the voltage from the alternator will immediately rise above 13V, even for a heavily depleted battery. Remember, each battery will take what current it needs, until it is "full", and 2) it is the battery that effectively controls this taper-off of charge rate, not the alternator. All the regulator does on the alternator is to ensure that the output voltage does not rise above a preset value (usually between 13.8 and 14.4V). 3) Until the battery (or batteries, with a leisure battery in the equation) terminal voltage has reached the regulator voltage, the alternator should be charging at a high current (the "Bulk Phase" referred to by CD). 4) After this preset voltage has been reached, the current starts to taper off - the "Absorption Phase", if you're interested.
The best way to ensure that batteries get the best charge they can, on the vehicle, and a very simple fix, is to change the alternator regulator for one with a higher output voltage. 5) Many of our original alternators will still have their 13.8V regs. Simply changing this for a 14.4V one will make a HUGE difference to how well your leisure battery charges. I have a fair bit of experience with boat charging systems, where there is usually a very large domestic battery bank, and the need to recharge as efficiently as possible. Much has been written about this subject by people who are real experts, and the consensus is that the best thing you can do 6) to ensure the fastest charge and the best chance of getting the state-of-charge closer to 100%, is to raise the charging voltage to just below the gassing point of the batteries. This will be 14.4 - 14.6V for the majority of lead acid batteries. The majority of boaters have no access to mains hook-up to externally charge their batteries, but manage a very efficient charge regime by using the alternator mods I've just described, combined with some solar charging for the final part of the Absorption Phase, which can often take a LONG TIME to complete, at much lower current.
One final thing to watch: try never to let your leisure battery to get below 50% state-of-charge (or about 12.2V under no load). Repeatedly pulling batteries down to a very low state-of-charge, where the lights go dim, etc, is a sure-fire way to destroy expensive batteries well before their time.
kevtherev wrote:Thank you redgus interesting reading.
I have been banging on about traction batteries for a while now
I'd be interested if you have any opinions about them.
Mocki wrote:I now have a question for you ( and / anyone else listening) why is your split charge relay connected to your fridge at all?
The fridge should be connected only to the main battery , not the leisure battery , or its third in line to the power!