Hi again John and the maximum current draw you are likely to see, with one very low 130Ah battery is about 40 to 45 amps + what ever your fridge draws, if you are running one.
If you had two 130Ah batteries in a low state of charge, then initially your could see MAYBY as much as a 70 amp draw.
Even if you had three 130Ah house batteries, in a low state, 70 amps is about the maximum current draw you will see.
The limitation at this point is the output capacity of your alternator.
By the time you deduct the power needed to run your disco, and any power needed to charge the first auxiliary battery if it was low, then you would be lucky to see 50 to 60 amps at the rear batteries.
The thicker cable you have run, means that can easily increase the auxiliary/house battery capacity with out needing to do any upgrading of your cabling.
You have literally future proofed your setup.
There is a lot more to this and I will be doing a companion to what you can expect if you go with a DC/DC device.
Last edited by Pedro_The_Swift; 4th January 2018 at 09:29 AM. Reason: not required
Basic electrical interconnection of car auxiliary and/or trailer batteries to the crank battery do work provided isolation is taken care of, so it is never a clear case of “needing” a DC DC charger.
i have heeded the recommendations of people like Colyn Rivers in that DC DC chargers do optimise the charging of each battery. I have solar panels on both camper trailer and car and needed MPPT solar controllers for both the camper and car auxiliary batteries, so it was a straightforward choice to put combined DCDC/MPPT units on both.
I am very happy with the setup, and confident that my crank battery is never being discharged to feed the other batteries, particularly when the engine is not running. If the DC DC charger is sized correctly, it will usually deliver plenty of charge and will never exceed the recommended charging rate. The limit on charge rate is about the only operational criticism leveled at DC DC UNITS.
NEIL
Wouldn't the second battery in a dual setup or trailer be drawing on the first battery, which was then being recharged by the alternator and/or solar?
Batteries just take the charge they need (Not talking about Lithium though) so allowing the battery to pull as much current as it needs is the quickest and best way to charge a lead acid battery, you can't exceed a recommeded charge rate as lead acid batteries don't work like that. The only thing likely to limit the current draw on a decent setup if they drained quite low is the alternator output.
So DCDC chargers just limit the current for no good reason and make it so you have to drive for hours longer to charge the batteries fully. Sometimes if you are only doing short trips of a couple of hours a day, you may never top them up fully. Having a good solar setup with MPPT charger on it will probably be masking the job the DCDC is doing though.
And yes I'm keeping it nice and only pointing out the technical aspects of lead acid batteries here.
If you need to contact me please email homestarrunnerau@gmail.com - thanks - Gav.
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