Optima batteries can be mounted laying on their side, would there be enough space by doing that. I’m sure there will be something that fits without having to do mods to the body.
Currently, my second battery is in the rear of my Defender (bought it this way). I’m thinking of relocating it to the front for better weight distribution and simplifying my wiring.
I have two optima batteries and know of the dual battery setup under the passenger seat.
However, it is a very tight setup and I would have to relocate my airlocker compressor and obviously rewire it which is a substantial job. I also like the idea of having physical separation of the two batteries as I’ve seen batteries go up in smoke (not in my car).
Given that the ECU in my Defender is relocated to under the center console, the box under the driver seat is empty.
Ideally, I’d like to fit my second battery under the driver seat, but obviously the floor is not deep enough.
I am wondering if anyone has put their auxiliary battery under the driver seat and what exactly did, i.e. replace the entire floor, or cut it out just for the battery to fit,…
Optima batteries can be mounted laying on their side, would there be enough space by doing that. I’m sure there will be something that fits without having to do mods to the body.
'88 County Isuzu 4Bd1 Turbo Intercooled, '96 Defender 130 CC VNT
'85 Isuzu 120 Trayback, '72 SIIA SWB Diesel Soft Top
'56 SI Ute Cab
Probably not unless you ditch the metal lid for the seat box. And even then, you'd be lucky to gain 30mm before you hit the underside of the seat.
The optima is a gel cell, so no liquid sloshing around inside like typical lead acid batteries. On their side is perfectly OK. A few mates with rock crawlers have them mounted in all sorts of orientations in between barwork etc. It's a non-issue.
There are a large number of battery size formats (group sizes), so you can choose one to fit the space, but might take a concession on AH rating, CCA or some of the other performance metrics of the battery. So your buying decision may be dictated on what application yo want your battery to meet.
As far as wiring goes... you'll have no issue running some leads thru the tin metal, over the TY case, and into the primary battery compartment.
-Mitch
'El Burro' 2012 Defender 90.
With the last 2 Counties & now my Defender I have removed the whole seatbox ( usually when I soundproof them) and turned it upside down, angle grinded off the existing base where it tapers down & extended the base about 100mm with steel sheet welded on. It then sits level with the chassis bottom rail. It sounds a lot more work than it actually is, this gives ample room for 2 x 100 amp batteries and storage above them. I can post pics of the finished result if you are interested.
David
Just make sure it can vent outside the vehicle if it boils. Even supposedly sealed batteries can vent if they boil. You don't want to fill the cabin with toxic fumes. Defenders have a vent for the battery under the front passenger seat.
OK, Hope you can make sense. The compressor is basically sitting over the chassis rail if that helps orientation. Spares & tyre repair aerosols are towards the rear, next to the full river battery. Bit of spaghetti like but has worked fine for 6 years, although I did wreck a century battery but it was a warranty job. Basically I use a marine 3 way switch with the isolator at bottom right for a 3rd battery under driver side ( also enlarged) I have done serious 4wds stuff with no clearance issues.
| Search AULRO.com ONLY! | Search All the Web! | 
|---|
|  |  | 
Bookmarks