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Advice on controlling Alternator to House battery charging?

Traveler7
Explorer
Explorer
Thanks in advance for your help!

I have a 60 amp alternator in my 1977 Dodge Camper Van and i want to use it to supplement a Solar setup- 160 watt panel flat mounted on roof with a 10 amp PWM solar controller feeding a 100 or 120 AH AGM battery.

Currently (no pun intended) there is a diode battery isolator running power to charge the house, but I want to be sure it does not overcharge the AGM. My thought is to get a 30 amp PWM solar controller and run thru it so I get an automatic float mode out of it.

I know a 60 Amp alternator probably won't send much back at all, but I am concerned that running many hours every day may cause a problem. I'm also open to eventually upgrading to a 110 Amp Alternator in the future.

So........?

Thanks again!
"We are not defined by our limitations, we are defined by our potential"
11 REPLIES 11

Traveler7
Explorer
Explorer
MrWizard wrote:
solar controller not needed between isolator and battery, won't help anything
and might burn out if battery is really low, when you start the engine

the alternator will NOT over charge your new AGM house battery


OP here, thank you this reassures me!
"We are not defined by our limitations, we are defined by our potential"

burningman
Explorer II
Explorer II
I’ve replaced those crummy battery isolators with solenoids. It’s a big improvement.
As mentioned, make sure to buy a continuous-duty solenoid.
Another benefit is the options it gives you. I wired a switch on mine to chose either manual both-battery-connect or auto-connect. I used an oil pressure switch to activate my auto-connect so it doesn’t connect the two unless the engine is actually running. Otherwise, if you just wire it to the ignition, if you ever accidentally leave it on you’ll drain both batteries.
Also, if your house battery is dead it puts a strain on your starting battery when you try to start the engine.
It’s easy to do, just remember the oil pressure switch switches a ground wire instead of a “+” wire.
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Lwiddis
Explorer II
Explorer II
Why don’t you add a panel and upgrade the controller? No supplement will be needed most days. You are already over the general guideline of one solar watt for each battery AH.
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Sam_Spade
Explorer
Explorer
MrWizard wrote:

the alternator will NOT over charge your new AGM house battery


This.

IF.....all your batteries are receiving a voltage high enough to charge while going down the road, you probably should NOT mess with anything.
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landyacht318
Explorer
Explorer
X 2 on getting rid of the diode isolator.

Your issue will be undercharging, not overcharging, as your voltage regulator is likey allowing only high 13v when it and the alternator are hot.

AGMs want to be brough to 14.4 to 14.7ish until amperage tapers to very low numbers. 13.7 will slow amperage the battery accepts by about 2/3, and your diode based isolator knocks off at least 0.5v from whatever the alternator is allowed to make.

Get a continuous duty solenoid and trigger it with the ignition, and hope the solar can hold the battery in mid 14's until the AGm is full after you are done driving. SAve the big finnned heatsink from the diode based isolator, it will be good for something somewhere, but not for isolating your house battery.


The Mopar voltage regulator can be replaced with one that is adjustable voltage. My 89 dodge is modified as such, I can choose any voltage between 12.8 and 15.3 by twisting a dial on my dashboard nect to my digital voltmeter and digital ammeter.

The product below has the voltage dial on its backside:

https://www.ebay.com/itm/NEW-ADJUSTABLE-HD-EXTERNAL-VOLTAGE-REGULATOR-CHRYSLER-DODGE-PLYMOUTH-1970-8...

This is basically plug and play^^

If you are really worried about overcharging, or overheating your alternator when your battery is depleted and can suck up everything your alternator can make, set it to 13.8v.

Have a 3 hour drive and need to get as much juice as possible back into it the depleted battery, set it at 14.7v, and drive 30mph plus for underhood airflow, do not idle parked for more than 5 to 10 minutes as alternator can overheat feeding a depleted AGM over adequate thickness copper..

The VR casing needs to be well grounded to battery (-), but you could mount it backwards to the firewall, or put it on some velcro, and have a grounded wire running to battery negaticve from casing, and easily change voltage with a small screwdriver. Especially if you have a helper to rev engine and yell what voltage it is as you twist dial, and tak note of its position for 14.7 and for 13.8.

ScottG
Nomad
Nomad
I would dump the diode based isolator, Not only do you suffer the voltage drop of its diodes but they are terribly unreliable. I was warned and mine started killing my batteries on a trip. Then I was stuck on the side of the road, with family, a trailer and in the dark trying to bypass the stupid thing. Never again.
A 100% solenoid type relay will work better, longer and have no voltage drop.

Example

pianotuna
Nomad III
Nomad III
Hi,

The only reason to isolate the starter battery from the house battery is to prevent the starter battery from going dead.

The biggest issue is getting enough charging while driving to the AGm
Regards, Don
My ride is a 28 foot Class C, 256 watts solar, 556 amp-hours of Telcom jars, 3000 watt Magnum hybrid inverter, Sola Basic Autoformer, Microair Easy Start.

MrWizard
Moderator
Moderator
solar controller not needed between isolator and battery, won't help anything
and might burn out if battery is really low, when you start the engine

the alternator will NOT over charge your new AGM house battery
I can explain it to you.
But I Can Not understand it for you !

....

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1997 F53 Bounder 36s

theoldwizard1
Explorer
Explorer
I don't think using a solar charge is a good idea, but it is inexpensive and it might work ! The problem is, will that second charger "see" enough voltage from the alternator to charge the battery ? I have no idea how well 2 independent chargers would work charging the same battery.

Read this regarding charging a house battery from a vehicle alternator.

DC-DC battery charging

time2roll
Nomad
Nomad
Put a voltmeter on your AGM and compare to specs. I think the alternator through the diode will be undercharging the AGM. Even on a long 12 hour drive.

BFL13
Explorer II
Explorer II
"Overcharge" means too much voltage, not too many amps. Your alternator cannot do too much voltage. The battery itself has an amps "acceptance" limit for any particular state of charge and voltage. So no worries.

You do need to worry about ever getting that nice AGM fully recharged though. That means you need an ammeter to see when it gets down to nearly zip amps acceptance at its rated absorption voltage (14.8 or perhaps 14.4 depending on spec) with no load on it.

Arranging to be able to do that in an RV while camping is where it gets "interesting". Forum member Landyacht might have a few tips on that.
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