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Thread: Dual Battery Wiring

  1. #11
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    IMHO....In any dual battery system, where the two batteries are being charged in parallel, I would always link the negatives from both batteries using wire rather than the body/chassis.
    As Paul has pointed out, run a check to confrim your voltage drop and use wire to suit....
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  2. #12
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    Geez there seems to be some confusion in this post.

    Firstly the BATTERY is in the boot, so the wire gauge is related to the maximum input the second battery will get from the alternator when it is flat and the alternator is charging away at full noise trying to charge it. The wire gauge may affect the voltage into the second battery and therefore its recovery time.
    I this case the draw of the accessories is less/not relevant.

    Second the chassis is not the best place to earth to , as the earth points and the starting battery are usually earthed to the body, not directly to the chassis. Bodies are rubber mounted and the only link is often corroded body mount bolts. AFAIR the poster has not said what car but if a D2 it is a welded structure, there will be earth points all over the place, and IMHO a complete earth link is not needed, although if you have a 2B&S input it may be desirable to have a direct earth connection.

    If your controller light is on, there is a fair degree of certainty that the second battery is being charged.
    What led you to believe that it wasn't?

    Regards Philip A

  3. #13
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    Quote Originally Posted by PhilipA View Post
    Geez there seems to be some confusion in this post.

    Second the chassis is not the best place to earth to , as the earth points and the starting battery are usually earthed to the body, not directly to the chassis. Bodies are rubber mounted and the only link is often corroded body mount bolts. AFAIR the poster has not said what car but if a D2 it is a welded structure, there will be earth points all over the place, and IMHO a complete earth link is not needed, although if you have a 2B&S input it may be desirable to have a direct earth connection.

    If your controller light is on, there is a fair degree of certainty that the second battery is being charged.
    What led you to believe that it wasn't?

    Regards Philip A
    Yes the 2nd battery is earthed to the side of the body behind the rear seat belt. The deep cycle battery sits in a case with an indicator of charge & it has gone flat without use which is why I assume it has no charge.

  4. #14
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    Yes the 2nd battery is earthed to the side of the body behind the rear seat
    belt. The deep cycle battery sits in a case with an indicator of charge &
    it has gone flat without use which is why I assume it has no charge.
    Hmm.Have you checked the voltage of the second battery with a multimeter with the engine running?Should be around 14.6.
    Does the battery enclosure have a gauge which takes current to operate?
    You can measure by putting a multimeter across the +or -, and that may tell you if there is current leakage somewhere.

    And finally , how much do you drive the car and how old is the battery?
    Regards Philip A

  5. #15
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    No I need to do that, had the battery out to charge it up on the charger.

    It just has a 3 light check button on top of the case that you press, no voltage loss there I wouldn't think.

    The battery is over 4yrs old now. It had extended periods of low charge in a van I previously owned & probably doesn't fully charge anymore. I can't see the white bubble through the viewing hole, just black but it charges up still on a charger.

  6. #16
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    If you check that alternator charge is getting to the battery and it is, then IMHO you have a dead battery.
    A badly sulphated battery will take a surface charge but it will drop in a few hours. I had this a few weeks ago with the 3.5 year old starting battery in my D2. I installed an Optima as the starting battery in the D2 second battery position, and I noted that the controller was separating the batteries( at 12.4 volts in my case) overnight. A new AGM and the batteries hold about 12.6 after 24 hours.

    Regards Philip A

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