sysinu
Jetboaters Captain
- Messages
- 1,068
- Reaction score
- 548
- Points
- 217
- Location
- Park City, UT
- Boat Make
- Yamaha
- Year
- 2014
- Boat Model
- Limited S
- Boat Length
- 24
I know this has been asked previously, but I'm asking it in a different way.
The emergency parallel switch is there to allow current from both batteries to which ever switch is on (in the case of starting the boat or supplying more potential energy to the house switch). This I get.
There is a "second battery charging" indicator that I have as well. I assume the house battery is the "second battery", is that a safe assumption?
When you put the batteries in "emergency parallel" is it sufficient to assume that is a bidirectional switch (and that it's just completing the circuit making them parallel? Or does it have some directional current diode in place?
I ask this because I have a solar panel that I wired to my house battery from the controller unit. I want to top off both batteries between outings (I don't have big stereo amps or any of that such stuff that drains a lot of power). I don't want to wire the batteries in parallel each time, so I have been using the emergency parallel switch, assuming that would allow the house battery to charge my starting battery. Recently I have had some low voltage warnings from the tac's suggesting my starting battery is low.
If the emergency parallel is not directional current, then I know I have a bad battery and will replace it
. If it's directional, then I am hoping to know that
. I assume it would be directional since there is a "second battery charging" device in the mix, but that would be a pretty expensive "emergency parallel" switch in that case to have it provide directional current.
If it is directional, then I guess I have to manually parallel the batteries each time I get done (which isn't a big deal, but I would rather flip a switch that exists than put in a new switch and line).
TIA!
The emergency parallel switch is there to allow current from both batteries to which ever switch is on (in the case of starting the boat or supplying more potential energy to the house switch). This I get.
There is a "second battery charging" indicator that I have as well. I assume the house battery is the "second battery", is that a safe assumption?
When you put the batteries in "emergency parallel" is it sufficient to assume that is a bidirectional switch (and that it's just completing the circuit making them parallel? Or does it have some directional current diode in place?
I ask this because I have a solar panel that I wired to my house battery from the controller unit. I want to top off both batteries between outings (I don't have big stereo amps or any of that such stuff that drains a lot of power). I don't want to wire the batteries in parallel each time, so I have been using the emergency parallel switch, assuming that would allow the house battery to charge my starting battery. Recently I have had some low voltage warnings from the tac's suggesting my starting battery is low.
If the emergency parallel is not directional current, then I know I have a bad battery and will replace it


If it is directional, then I guess I have to manually parallel the batteries each time I get done (which isn't a big deal, but I would rather flip a switch that exists than put in a new switch and line).
TIA!