Quote:
Originally posted by drivesafe
1) John, what does the voltage of the battery remaining at 12 volts got to do with the current load being caused by the filaments.
2) Again, using the starter motor as an example. Your vehicle’s battery drops to 8 and in some situations as low as 6 volts while cranking so of cause the battery is not going to remain at 12 volts. As I have already pointed out, the start up current draw is so high that it looks like a dead short at the alternator, when the power is taken directly at the alternator instead of at the battery. A dead short is a low voltage event.
3) The battery still acts as a current supply during the initial start up of the globes and as such cushions the high current draw before it gets to the alternator.
4) No matter what the voltage is or drops to, there is still going to be a huge current draw that is way WAY above what the alternator can produce. This high current draw means there is going to be a voltage drop and this is not what the alternator is designed to work against, it’s designed to try and maintain the voltage and it can’t do that when the current draw is far beyond it’s maximum capability, whereas the battery is specifically designed to caters for high current drains and the very reason everything is connected to the battery and not the alternator.
5) And once again, if this was a better way to wire a vehicle, I’m sure the makers would be doing so.
Cheers.
I seem to be expressing myself unclearly or something!