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MH Battery switch

BJean
Explorer
Explorer
I have a bad coil 120-105452-6 and have a replacement 120-105752-6 bith made by white rogers and need to know if they are interchangeble. White Rogers says they have no info. Need help.
16 REPLIES 16

Bobbo
Explorer II
Explorer II
I was not aware than a chassis battery would be charged by the converter. Mine certainly wasn't. At least until I installed a Trik-L-Start. Now it does.

And, yes, I know some higher end RVs do charge the chassis battery from the converter. Most, however, don't.
Bobbo and Lin
2017 F-150 XLT 4x4 SuperCab w/Max Tow Package 3.5l EcoBoost V6
2017 Airstream Flying Cloud 23FB

BJean
Explorer
Explorer
Sorry for the delay but was in same spot for several weeks and had trouble finding a compatable unit. Finally was able to install a compatable unit (120-105452) a couple of days ago and it still will not charge from chassie battery. Was told that there should be a timer relay that will activate the coil. Was told the relay would be in under dash connected to the emergency start switch. Problem is the wires from switch run from switch to plastic tube that runs under the unit to coil area and there appears to be no relay.
Any ideas?

OnaQuest
Explorer
Explorer
enblethen wrote:
I maybe reading this backward.
My rig uses four pole and the ground goes through the battery control circuitry to delay closing the relay until primary battery had reached a specified level.
If he is replacing a three pole with a four pole then yes, he just needs to provide a good solid ground to the bracket.
If the bad replay is a four pole and the replacement is a three pole, then it will not work.


Again, I have never seen (but I would love to see your wiring diagram for this circuit) an IRD or BIRD circuit that controlled the "ground" side of the cross connect/isolator relay.

I can only reiterate that the 120 series relays are wired and terminated as I have described. The three terminal relays have one end of the pick coil GROUNDED internally.

You can replace a four terminal relay with a three, or vice versa, as long as you totally understand your circuit and know that the relay is controlled by a +12v signal.

All the Intellitec and RV-Custom Products BCCs, IRDs and BIRDs work this way.

BTW - I just looked at your profile and see that your rig is a Pace Arrow. The Pace uses an RV-CP BCC, so your voltage sensing circuit does NOT control the ground side of the relay. It actually provides +12V when the charging conditions indicate that the relay should close. The diagram for your BCC shows that one side of the relay coil goes directly to ground. This means that you could use either the three or four terminal 120 relay. However, the 120 style relay won't physically fit in the RV-CP BCC. Yours, as well as mine, uses an old Ford shaped starter relay. It is continuous duty, though.

enblethen
Nomad
Nomad
I maybe reading this backward.
My rig uses four pole and the ground goes through the battery control circuitry to delay closing the relay until primary battery had reached a specified level.
If he is replacing a three pole with a four pole then yes, he just needs to provide a good solid ground to the bracket.
If the bad replay is a four pole and the replacement is a three pole, then it will not work.

Bud
USAF Retired
Pace Arrow


2003 Chev Ice Road Tracker

OnaQuest
Explorer
Explorer
enblethen wrote:
I just re-read it. Still need to know what kind of circuit OP has as to whether the ground goes through a network to operate. I three posted unit will not work in a four post system.

You need some understanding just to comment on this subject.

He is replacing;

120 105452-6, A solenoid with TWO large posts (for the battery connections) and a single small post for activation of the coil. Total = 3, because the coil is grounded internally.

WITH the following;

120 105752-6, A solenoid with TWO large posts (for the battery connections) and two small posts for activation of the coil. Total = 4, because the coil is isolated i.e. NOT grounded.

I could walk you through the specification sheets for each relay if required.

BTW - I would be very interested in seeing the RV system that uses circuitry to switch the solenoid coil ground.

enblethen
Nomad
Nomad
I just re-read it. Still need to know what kind of circuit OP has as to whether the ground goes through a network to operate. I three posted unit will not work in a four post system.

Bud
USAF Retired
Pace Arrow


2003 Chev Ice Road Tracker

OnaQuest
Explorer
Explorer
enblethen wrote:
If there is only one small terminal, it is the power connection. The ground would be through the metal base.
Some rigs route the ground through a monitoring system.
Verify that the old and new relays are exactly the same configuration.
Did you not read my first reply?

enblethen
Nomad
Nomad
If there is only one small terminal, it is the power connection. The ground would be through the metal base.
Some rigs route the ground through a monitoring system.
Verify that the old and new relays are exactly the same configuration.

Bud
USAF Retired
Pace Arrow


2003 Chev Ice Road Tracker

OnaQuest
Explorer
Explorer
BJean wrote:
OnaQuest: I have 2 ground wires runing to the single ground on the bad unit. I do not know how to figure out which one should go to witch of the 2 ground posts on new unit. Any help would be of great help.
I appreciate al of the help that I have gotten.


Are you saying that there is only one (1) small terminal on the old unit, with two (2) wires on it?

If that is true, then put both those wires on the LEFT terminal of the new relay AND add a small wire to the other (RIGHT) terminal, connected to GROUND.

If I've misunderstood what you said, please explain.

PS - If the base of the relay is bolted to a metal surface, attach the new ground wire under one of the mounting bolts.

BJean
Explorer
Explorer
OnaQuest: I have 2 ground wires runing to the single ground on the bad unit. I do not know how to figure out which one should go to witch of the 2 ground posts on new unit. Any help would be of great help.
I appreciate al of the help that I have gotten.

MrWizard
Moderator
Moderator
onaquest...thank you for the info
I can explain it to you.
But I Can Not understand it for you !

....

Connected using T-Mobile Home internet and Visible Phone service
1997 F53 Bounder 36s

enblethen
Nomad
Nomad
A good replacement is the Intellitec Big Boy. They are expensive.
Big Boy

Bud
USAF Retired
Pace Arrow


2003 Chev Ice Road Tracker

Dusty_R
Explorer
Explorer
Personally I'm not a fan of White Rogers, I would look for another manufacture.

OnaQuest
Explorer
Explorer
They are compatible (and interchangeable) with respect to all operating characteristics.

Current capabilities of the coils are identical.
Current capabilities of the contacts are identical.
Contact material (silver alloy) is identical.
Mounting bracket may be slightly different. (no big thing)

What IS different, are the small coil terminals.

The 105452 has either just a single terminal (with the other end of the coil grounded internally) or two terminals with one of the terminals externally grounded to the mounting bracket to provide the path to ground.

The 105752 has two isolated terminals for the pick coil. You will need to connect one terminal to your 12V pick signal and then connect the other to ground. If they are polarity sensitive, they will be marked.