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    How to hook up two Batteries

    I need to get an extra battery into my plow truck and I know alot of you have installed two batteries into your boats to cover your huge sound systems.

    How do you do it? Do you need a bigger alternator?

    #2
    Connect them in parallel, negative post to negative post, positive post to positive post. This configuration will give you the same voltage and twice the crank capacity
    I do not know what size alternator you have installed but you should be fine
    "Failing to prepare is preparing to fail" John Wooden- Rest in Peace

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      #3
      How do you intend to use the battery, this will determine how it gets wired.

      As noted above by lwndr, simply connecting them in parallel will give you 2x (in theory, if the 2 batteries are the same) the CCA's. If an ISO/Combiner is used, this will allow the both batteries to be charged by the alt, but isolate them from each other. This way, what even loads get wired to each one, will not draw off the other. Depending on what Iso/Combiner you use, you can also combine them for the starting, then isolate them again from each other's loads.

      Is this a true plow truck, or just an old beater with a plow mounted upfront? If I remember right, trucks like this: wrecker trucks, work trucks, ambulance chassis, etc, used to come with the highest amp alt available at the time, as it was expected to have the additional electrical loads placed on it.
      Mikes Liquid Audio: Knowledge Experience Customer Service you can trust-KICKER WetSounds ACME props FlyHigh Custom Ballast Clarion LiquidLumens LEDs Roswell Wave Deflector And More

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        #4
        if you wire pos to pos and neg to neg, your alternator will not charge both
        HUMAN BUILT = HUMAN FIXED
        switchbait.com

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          #5
          Originally posted by JUST-IN-TIME View Post
          if you wire pos to pos and neg to neg, your alternator will not charge both
          Yes it will. They will be seen as one large battery. Power simply flows through the cables. The question is how low will the batteries get, so will he need to upgrade the alternator to handle the extra charging capacity.
          Be excellent to one another.

          Comment


            #6
            no it wont trust me

            once one gets low it draws from the other one

            why do you think boats have 1/2 both switches then
            HUMAN BUILT = HUMAN FIXED
            switchbait.com

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              #7
              Originally posted by JUST-IN-TIME View Post
              no it wont trust me

              once one gets low it draws from the other one

              why do you think boats have 1/2 both switches then
              Please explain your theory in detail, my boat must be the exception to the rule.
              "Failing to prepare is preparing to fail" John Wooden- Rest in Peace

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                #8
                Originally posted by JUST-IN-TIME View Post
                no it wont trust me

                once one gets low it draws from the other one

                why do you think boats have 1/2 both switches then
                If they are wired in parallel they will discharge at the same rate. If one battery is bad it would pull the other down but otherwise they will be just like one large battery. Most diesel trucks are wired like that from the factory.
                Last edited by ajholt7; 12-22-2010, 05:55 AM.

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                  #9
                  Originally posted by JUST-IN-TIME View Post
                  if you wire pos to pos and neg to neg, your alternator will not charge both
                  Yes, please explain how 2 batteries wired together, in parallel, are charged and discharged separately

                  If wired in parallel, battery 2 will not wait until battery 1 is half way down before it starts to drain it to it, which is called "equalizing". They are one large 12V battery and if they are of equal size, type and age, they will always equalize at an even level.

                  Based on your statement:
                  why do you think boats have 1/2 both switches then
                  even these batteries will not get charged EVER by the battery, even though the switch combines then together in parallel when it gets turned to "Both". If that's the case, then what good is the battery and the switch because the battery will be discharged after a few uses, then dead because it's not getting charged.....
                  Mikes Liquid Audio: Knowledge Experience Customer Service you can trust-KICKER WetSounds ACME props FlyHigh Custom Ballast Clarion LiquidLumens LEDs Roswell Wave Deflector And More

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                    #10
                    if they are the same batteries, same MCA and amp hrs, they might drain equally but i doubt it, due to cable and length of cables

                    if you guys have them wired in parallel, get a volt meter on them both and look at the voltage draws and charge rates

                    its going to be different

                    some of your boats might have isolators on them, look at that also

                    an ACR is what you want with a 2 way battery switch

                    and you never want to run on both batteries, always save 1 to start he boat up

                    you should have a starting battery and 1 deep cycle

                    might want read up on the ABYC guide lines on electrical, its one step above the USCG regs
                    HUMAN BUILT = HUMAN FIXED
                    switchbait.com

                    Comment


                      #11
                      Originally posted by JUST-IN-TIME View Post
                      if they are the same batteries, same MCA and amp hrs, they might drain equally but i doubt it, due to cable and length of cables

                      if you guys have them wired in parallel, get a volt meter on them both and look at the voltage draws and charge rates

                      its going to be different

                      some of your boats might have isolators on them, look at that also

                      an ACR is what you want with a 2 way battery switch

                      and you never want to run on both batteries, always save 1 to start he boat up

                      you should have a starting battery and 1 deep cycle

                      might want read up on the ABYC guide lines on electrical, its one step above the USCG regs


                      This thread is about a plow truck

                      2 batteries wired in parallel will equalize in voltage.

                      If a system utilizes a diode type isolator, then the batteries are never combined, either in series or parallel, so it has no bearing in the discussion of weather or not 2 paralleled batteries charge the same or equalize, or not.

                      "an ACR is what you want" Hmmmm, great idea! Umm, that's what I stated in the post where you told me I was wrong. So, an ACR connects 2 batteries, or battery banks, in PARALLEL, right? If so, then based on your original statement, the alternator will not charge the 2 batteries. If this is true, and its not, then why are you now recommending the very setup you claimed would not work

                      If you never want to run the boat, or plow truck in this thread, on both batteries, then why recommend an ACR and a "2 way" switch, which is nothing more then a manual combining switch?

                      "you should have a starting battery and 1 deep cycle
                      " So, its not good to have 2 different types.....or is it

                      Man, im even more confused by your statements now
                      Mikes Liquid Audio: Knowledge Experience Customer Service you can trust-KICKER WetSounds ACME props FlyHigh Custom Ballast Clarion LiquidLumens LEDs Roswell Wave Deflector And More

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                        #12
                        an ACR, is a switch, it switches to the battery that needs the voltage

                        so you can run in parallel and still get the charge while not drawing down 1 battery

                        painless wire kits have a kit like this

                        i was referring to boats about batteries, so about the confusion, but if somebody searches 2 batts this will come up
                        HUMAN BUILT = HUMAN FIXED
                        switchbait.com

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                          #13
                          Originally posted by JUST-IN-TIME View Post
                          an ACR, is a switch, it switches to the battery that needs the voltage

                          so you can run in parallel and still get the charge while not drawing down 1 battery

                          painless wire kits have a kit like this

                          i was referring to boats about batteries, so about the confusion, but if somebody searches 2 batts this will come up
                          Yep, I know what an Auto Combining Relay is.....I use them quite often.

                          Sorry to disagree, but if the batteries are paralleled, then they can not be isolated at the same time. A mechanical device, such as an ACR, can not allow a battery to receive a charge, but isolate it from the others at the same time.

                          What can do this, is a diode, and a diode type Isolator is not an ACR.

                          Got a link or part number to what you use from Painless? A quick search yields no marine products, so i'm guessing they dont have anything that is ABYC or USCG certified, or anything "ACR
                          Mikes Liquid Audio: Knowledge Experience Customer Service you can trust-KICKER WetSounds ACME props FlyHigh Custom Ballast Clarion LiquidLumens LEDs Roswell Wave Deflector And More

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                            #14
                            http://www.zaib4x4.com/catalog/produ...oducts_id=5706


                            What is an ACR, and how does it work?

                            * What is an ACR? An ACR parallels (combines) batteries during charging, and isolates them when charging has stopped and after battery voltage has fallen. An ACR is intended to keep a load from discharging both of the batteries.
                            * How does an ACR work? An ACR senses when the voltage of either of the batteries rises to a level indicating that a charge source is active (13.0V for 2 minutes). The ACR′s contacts then connect and the ACR applies the charge to both batteries. If the voltage on both of the batteries subsequently drops to 12.75V for 30 seconds, the ACR will disconnect, isolating the batteries.
                            * Why do I need an ACR? An ACR allows two battery banks to be connected so that they can share the output of a single charge source, allowing the user to charge more battery banks than the number of charging outputs. For example, an ACR can be used with a single-output charger, resulting in a simpler system at lower cost than a dual-output charger.
                            * How many ACRs do I need? To combine two battery banks, one ACR is needed; to combine three battery banks, two ACRs are required.
                            HUMAN BUILT = HUMAN FIXED
                            switchbait.com

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                              #15
                              http://bluesea.com/viewresource/1366#What_is_it

                              might want to read up on ACR's also
                              HUMAN BUILT = HUMAN FIXED
                              switchbait.com

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