โNov-05-2017 09:43 AM
โJul-07-2018 07:21 PM
โJul-07-2018 06:19 PM
โJul-07-2018 05:11 PM
โJul-07-2018 11:10 AM
โJun-05-2018 08:12 PM
MEXICOWANDERER wrote:
Your truck voltage is fine the way you state. Millions of AGM batteries see this same voltage every day. You may well overthink your way into a problem ๐
โJun-05-2018 07:32 PM
โJun-05-2018 05:20 PM
pianotuna wrote:
S Davis,
Most of us just want the starter battery to be kept from discharging. An inexpensive continuous duty solenoid with a 200 amp rating will do that inexpensively and reliably (mine are 9 years old now).
I did add a trik-l-start to keep the starter battery charged for the long times between trips which has continued to offer perfect service for 7 years.
โJun-05-2018 11:08 AM
โJun-05-2018 11:06 AM
โJun-05-2018 10:53 AM
โJun-05-2018 10:27 AM
โJan-06-2018 07:17 PM
โJan-06-2018 06:22 PM
โJan-06-2018 03:26 PM
BFL13 wrote:
I thought you were using a breaker at each end as your "fuses". You asked if you also needed fuses. Mex did not answer that. I do not know the answer. I get confused over "slow" vs "fast" acting and when to use which.
โJan-06-2018 03:20 PM
MEXICOWANDERER wrote:
FUSES are EXACT and almost instantaneous. They are also a pain-in-the-ass to have to change. Fuses are wonderful to protect sensitive electronics, the inverter, converter, stereos, computers etc.
Circuit breakers are sloppy. Not exact. React instantly only when badly overloaded, are forgiving and heal themselves quickly and automatically.
BREAKERS are perfect to protect main line trunk power cables. FUSES will blow if a power source is hooked up backward. But small appliances will still burn out with reversed polarity.
The actual only NEGATIVE with using 400-amp T class fuses on main battery cables is you'd better carry spare(s), and the fusing block should be in a very easy to get to place. If a fuse fails what do you do? Try another fus...****! ?
That's why I prefer breakers. Class T fuses are not cheap and an inadvertent "OH NO!" does not become an exercise of feeding more fuses by trail and error until the problem is found.
There is nothing wrong with using a ultimate limit fuse ahead of a circuit breaker. An example by toad has a 30-amp fuse, then a 20 amp breaker protecting the radiator fan motor. When the fan motor shorted, it blew the fuse -- telling me the 20-amp breaker reacted slowly. Then the circuit went "open circuit". Diagnostics were a snap. The motor is now open circuit but before that it had shorted. No sense in troubleshooting further. Motor bad. Bad motor. Recycle motor.