Forum Discussion

DryCamper11's avatar
DryCamper11
Explorer
Oct 28, 2013

Batterty Isolators - Is there a consensus?

There's another thread on battery isolators, and here is a quote from that thread on testing a diode type isolator:
"Should be around 14 at the outer lugs and around 14.7 at the B+ lug"
Presumably, the 0.7v difference in voltage is due to the voltage drop over the diode in the isolator. That's a lot when charging a battery.

1) I know there are some modified alternators/voltage regulators that put out 0.7 more voltage than the batteries need to compensate for the diode isolator voltage drop.

2) Others just ignore the diode drop.

3) A different isolator design is to use relays - they have no voltage drop.

4) My 40 year old RV uses a continuous duty relay and I manually engage it when on the road if I want the coach batteries charged by the engine. If the ignition switch is off, it's off, too. I like having control over whether the engine alternator is trying to charge the house batteries (there are times when I don't want the alternator running maxed out). I've occasionally left the ignition on and the dual switch on when I'm parked and plugged into 120VAC to get the engine battery charged by the converter/charger.

Is there any consensus on the preferred system and the advantages/disadvantages? Does anyone have a system they particularly like?

About Technical Issues

Having RV issues? Connect with others who have been in your shoes.24,188 PostsLatest Activity: Jan 17, 2025