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phishheadmi's avatar
phishheadmi
Explorer II
May 20, 2014

Battery questions

I have a couple quick questions about my battery use.

We have a five night camping trip coming up and won't have shore power available. I have two group 24 batteries...one is about a year old, one is about two years old. The newer one seems to charge and hold to 12.6V the older gets to about 12.45. Would I be better off wiring them together in parallel, or using them individually, one at a time? I'd like to wire them together, but seem to recall reading somewhere that it only worked well if both batteries were identical.


Next, I have a Honda eu1000i generator that I don't want to run much, but can use to charge the batteries if necessary. I do have the optional charging cable for the gene, is it more efficient to use that, or plug in the shore power and charge through the tt's electrical system?

12 Replies

  • Hi,

    Because of the Peukert effect, batteries wired in a balanced manner will allow more total amp-hours than using them individually.

    It would be best to equalize both batteries individually to get them up to the greatest possible capacity.

    Recharging from the generator should be done with the existing converter, if it is a modern three stage. Additional chargers can be "piggy backed" up to the limits of what the generator can power watt wise.

    The output from the EU1000 is unregulated, and limited to only about 8 amps. That is a poor way to recharge a battery bank.


    This is what is balanced and best for twin twelve volt batteries.



    As it often doesn't cost a dime more to do this, I think it is worth the trouble.

    If you wish to understand the "why" surf here:

    correctly interconnecting multiple twelve volt batteries

    Others may say it doesn't matter--but unless there is a compelling reason to not optimize charging and discharging why not do it the best possible way?
  • That much difference in age and condition, I would use them separately, because the battery at 12.6 will give up charge into the weaker one, without it actually storing any more energy.

    I have a pair, wired in parallel when installed new, but usually one gets weaker first, and when I detect that happening, I'll split off the bad one and use the good one, until I can replace both.

    At least twice a season, I'll disconnect the batteries and separate them, to charge them each with an external charger.

    What do you know about the 12V line from your generator? Is it a smart multistage charger? Is it rated for more output than your converter charger? Usually the fastest way to charge from a recreational generator is to use the 120V output to feed a smart charger with peak output amperage rating number that is at least 10% and up to 20%, of the number that is your amp-hour rating on the battery.