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johntramp wrote:If it works like this you will have no problems if one battery is flat.
The alternator does not really put out current to the battery, the battery draws current from the alternator. So when one battery is flat and the other charged, the flat battery will draw a lot of current and the charged battery only a little.
If you were to measure the current from the diode to the battery for each battery it would be different and the current on the line from alt to diode would be the sum of the two.
johntramp wrote:If you are talking about the voltage regulator on the alternator, one of the pins is a reference.
Hmmm... won't this cause issues?cat007 wrote:I'm wanting the reference for the alternator to be from after the diode so the alternator can compensate for the voltage drop.
Stealer Of Souls wrote:Hmmm... won't this cause issues?cat007 wrote:I'm wanting the reference for the alternator to be from after the diode so the alternator can compensate for the voltage drop.
If you're wired after one of the diodes, you have no idea what the other battery is doing.
If you wire to each battery then you've just parallelled the batteries together. Yes? No?
cat007 wrote:
Or am I looking at it all wrong? Is the alt supposed to sense what it is putting out or what the batteries are putting out?
cat007 wrote:Ah ok
Thanks for clearing that up!
I'll go to dick Smiths tomorrow. A 5 or 6 amp diode should be ok? Any particular sort?
cat007 wrote:
For some reason that link doesn't work. Just takes me to the dick smiths site.....
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