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Thread: 24v and 12v?

  1. #11
    Join Date
    Oct 2006
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    Thanks to everyone for their very helpful input,I'll go and talk to an auto electrician and weigh up the different options.
    Cheers Eric

  2. #12
    Join Date
    Jan 1970
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    'The Creek' Captain Creek, QLD
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    Quote Originally Posted by garrycol View Post
    My 101 is 24v originally running everything. The previous owners rigged up a 12v alternator as well as the original 24v alternator and the 12v charges secondary 12v battery/s.

    I looked at all sorts of alternatives to get rid of this secondary system but as mentioned the 24v to 12v reducers are OK for small applications but even the largest ones really don't provide much juice. The same applies to the Redarc equalizers - to get anything of decent power is exceptionally expensive.

    So I have stayed with my current system - plenty of power to run the truck, plenty of 12v power to run ancillaries including a winch. If starting batteries fail - you can always jump start yourself. The main downside is the space needed for the extra batteries.

    Garry
    Quote Originally Posted by Brian Hjelm View Post
    You can use a 24v starter with a series/parallel switch and two 12v batteries. You use a 12v alternator and don't have to change the rest of the electrical system. Easy way to get one is from a truck wrecker. Commonly used on Cummins engines.
    So Brian's suggestion is looking like the most attractive alternative to running dual charging/battery systems.

    A simple way to dramatically reduce the 12V load on a dc to dc voltage converter or redrc charge equaliser, is to use 24V head/spot lights. Pairs of 12V globes can be wired in series to use in a 24V circuit, but downside is if one globe blows, the other won't get power.

  3. #13
    Join Date
    Sep 2007
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    Quote Originally Posted by Brian Hjelm View Post
    You can use a 24v starter with a series/parallel switch and two 12v batteries. You use a 12v alternator and don't have to change the rest of the electrical system. Easy way to get one is from a truck wrecker. Commonly used on Cummins engines.
    This is exactly the setup my rangie uses. But it's a 12v direct drive starter with 24v shoved up it.
    Starts well but pulls 350-500 amps on 24v.

    A lot of buses use them too.

  4. #14
    Join Date
    Jan 2009
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    Kuranda, Far North Queensland
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    Not wishing to hijack this thread but I think this is an answer to my problem - I was asking elsewhere about setting up a 24V alternator for my FFT in adition to the 12V one so I could keep the radio batteries charged.

    Do I read it correctly that the following would be a good solution for running 24V radios in a 12V vehicle?

    Howard
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