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Old 05-13-2010, 03:04 AM   #1
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Default PIGGYBACK BATTERIES

HELLO B/ERS LOL I AM GOING TO PUT IN A SECOND HOUSE BATTERY .SHOULD I PIGGYBACK THEM /CONNECT POS TO POS AND NEG TO NEG OR KEEP THEM SEPARATE AND WHEN I RUN OUT OF POWER IN ONE ,THEN PUT THE CABLES ONTO THE FULL BATTERY.ALSO IF THEY ARE PIGGY BACK .AND I CHARGE THEM ,DO I JUST CHARGE THE ONE AND THEM BEING CONNECTED IT WILL SIMULTANEOUSLY CHARGE THE TWO. ANY INPUT OUT THERE IN B LAND?
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Old 05-13-2010, 03:09 AM   #2
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Default Re: PIGGYBACK BATTERIES

I'm no expert, nor am I an electrician.
I would parallel them (pos with pos, neg with neg) as I believe they'll drain just as fast together,
as separately. Same holds true for charging. There's only so much juice they'll hold,
so charging/discharging them together should be fine. They'll probably last longer, too.
Just my opinion.

(I'm not much of a speller either. Corrected, I hope )
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Old 05-13-2010, 06:20 AM   #3
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Default Re: PIGGYBACK BATTERIES

I questioned the same thing only because if the house battery startes the gennerator and I kill it how would I start the genny. I hate to think I would have to start the engine to charge the house battery to start the genny.
But on your idea don't just disconnect it get a dual battery switch. I know may boats have them. That will allow you to charge both when charging is available and then you can run off just one or the other and maybe both depending on the switch.
While on the subject does anyone know if the house or chassie battery starts the genny on a 95 Coachman Saratoga?
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Old 05-13-2010, 02:12 PM   #4
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Default Re: PIGGYBACK BATTERIES

If you are going to use two batteries it makes more sense to connect them up (12V batteries) in parallel (+ to +, - to -). That way they discharge about equally at the same time. Thus the two, for example, would discharge each 25% instead of one alone 50% in a given usage. The idea is to increase your amp hours to prevent draining your batteries too much. If you treat as second one as a back up then the first one most likely will eventually get abused because you most likely will not get up in the middle of the night to switch them over until it is too late.
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Old 05-13-2010, 06:08 PM   #5
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Default Re: PIGGYBACK BATTERIES

One thing that is important to remember when hooking batteries in parallel is that they should be the same age, capacity and condition. Adding a new battery to an older weaker one will shorten it's life and usefulness significantly.

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Old 05-13-2010, 09:11 PM   #6
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Default Re: PIGGYBACK BATTERIES

Just curious, but why?
I've seen this mentioned on other websites, and can't quite get my head around the
physics of it. Unless the physics is a battery store owner, trying to sell more batteries.
As I said, if anyone has a layman's explanation, or something a little more complex?

update: I've googled the heck out of this and can't find any explanation that makes sense
to me in any kind of entropic flow of energy between 2 batteries with different capacities sense.
I could understand if one were fully charged, and you added a half charged battery to the mix, but
when you add a battery to a parallel pairing, you can't avoid that initially unless you charge both
batteries fully prior to combining them, can you? Once the parallel pair is created, the charging
should be uniform across both batteries and when the total "fully charged" status is reached, I
don't see how there would be any flow one way or the other. Once a load is put on the pair,
or directly on either battery, and the charge state begins to drop on one or the other, I can
understand how there would be flow between them then, as the power draw continues.
As I said, I'm not an electrician, electrical engineer, or a physics professor. This is high school
science classes stuff that I'm talking (and admittedly, struggling to recall ).
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Old 05-14-2010, 10:28 PM   #7
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Default Re: PIGGYBACK BATTERIES

I can give you the basics of why and know it from experience, if you want the exact science behind it, that might take a bit of research. I don't mind getting the specifics for you but it will take me a day or two.

What I do know from experience in both one of my first RVs and customer rigs in my old shop is this. When adding a second battery, typically it will be newer and stronger, any fault in the first battery will cause the second battery to quickly discharge. The stronger will keep attempting to charge the weaker one which will reduce it's life pretty quickly. That is why this time when I went to two batteries, I went ahead and bought 2 new identical AGMs and gave the old AGM less than a year old to a friend. I won't kill a good battery again.

Hope that helps for now, I will look up the exact science behind it for you when I am done with my current project though. I have to get my new floor and seats in so we can get back on the road. Very much in the middle of it now.

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Old 05-14-2010, 11:03 PM   #8
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Default Re: PIGGYBACK BATTERIES

No problem, Mike. I'm not questioning your experience, just that I found some other blogs
where they didn't have the same results. I googled parallel/different capacity/old/new/
charging/deep cycle/etc./etc., and came up with several discussion threads with some
(may have been marine applications) different results and opinions, that's all.

I've been running a hypothetical scenario in my head, and still can't figure out why electrical
energy would try to travel from a fully charged battery at rest, to another fully charged battery
at rest, no matter what their respective ages or conditions are. Fully charged is fully charged.

Like, Battery A is new, and can hold a finite amount of charge, let's say 160 amps, and Battery B is
3 years old, and now can only hold 100 amps. If both batteries are at full charge capacity,
there's no place for energy to go between them, because they're already both full.
If there was a draw (or phantom) on the pair, I would expect the discharge rate would be
balanced over both batteries with the lower capacity one draining first, because it holds less.
Do you see where I'm coming from with this?

I've got a technical question in to a local battery specialty store, to see what their thoughts are.
I thought I'd ask because in all the times people have purchased batteries (me too) I've never
been warned not to use a new and an old deep cycle battery together. I would think if it were
an issue, it would be a standard warning, especially for the really big rigs that have more than 2
deep cycle house batteries.
I'll post up the answer, when they get around to me. I asked for a techy explanation in
simple terms, if they can explain it.

Peace.
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Old 05-14-2010, 11:32 PM   #9
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Default Re: PIGGYBACK BATTERIES

Here are a couple of RV battery references that have been on the internet for some time and might be useful reading.

The 12volt Side of Life (Part 1)

The 12volt Side of Life (Part 2)
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Old 05-15-2010, 12:08 AM   #10
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Default Re: PIGGYBACK BATTERIES

WELL FIRST OF ALL I WANT TO THANK ALL FOR THEIR INPUT,AND YES I WILL BE RESTARTING WITH TWO NEW BATTERIES, BECAUSE THE ONBOARD CHARGER SHORTED AND FRIED THE EXISTING ONE,WHEN I GO CAMPING ,THATS WHEN I GET ALL MY MOVIE WATCHING IN. SO I LIKE TO HAVE PLENTY BATT POWER THAT WILL LAST ALMOST DOUBLE THE TIME AS ONE BATTERY.BECAUSE FOR ME WHEN THE POWER GOES DOWN IT'S PRETTY MUCH TIME TO HEAD BACK HOME.OR FIND A PLACE TO PLUG IN THE BATT CHARGER TO CHARGE THE ONE BATT ,I THINK TWO BATTS WOULD PRETTY MUCH DO THE JOB.ALSO IT'S PRETTY MUCH ALMOST SUMMER HERE IN AZ AND I CAN USE THEM TO RUN THE A/C LOL (JUST KIDDING) ANYWAYS THANKSFOR EVERYTHING GUYS AND GALS CHRIS IN PHOENIX AZ
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Old 05-15-2010, 12:29 AM   #11
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Default Re: PIGGYBACK BATTERIES

Quote:
Originally Posted by Davydd
Here are a couple of RV battery references that have been on the internet for some time and might be useful reading.

The 12volt Side of Life (Part 1)

The 12volt Side of Life (Part 2)
I have them (and others) bookmarked. mnemeth writes about all things RV, and seems pretty knowledgable
about all RV systems. I used his "Water, water, everywhere" diatribe as my plumbing knowledge base.
Neither of the blogs makes specific reference to the viability of mixed age/strength/condition of mulitple,
connected in parallel, coach batteries, that I could find. About 1/3 through "Part 1" there is
a wiring diagram showing 2 X 12V batteries connected in parallel, but no mention of whether they
need to be of equal age/type/capacity. In fact I don't see how you 100% guarantee capacity in any
battery, after it gets sold and used, since there are so many variables in when and how they are
charged and how often, and by what type of charger, and so on.
mnemeth (the authour and apparently very experienced RVer) talks about care and feeding of your
coach batteries, he mentions all the standard cautions, but nothing about relative age or capacity or
strength. That doesn't necessarily mean it's not important, but he seems very thorough in all his
other published RV "how to" blogs, doesn't mention it in his lengthy and detailed discussion about
batteries. Maybe he was trying to keep it simpler, or maybe he just assumes "everyone knows you
should always only use 2 identical batteries in your van" and it didn't need mention. I'm not sure.

Thanks for the links Davydd. Any/all input is welcome. I'd just like to understand this in some more
detail and if the science or technology explanation is available, I'd be interested in reading it.
I might not get it, but I'll read it.
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Old 05-15-2010, 01:10 AM   #12
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Default Re: PIGGYBACK BATTERIES

THANK YOU IT WAS NICE TO LEARN ABOUT THE BATTERIES ,ALSO THE DIAGRAM CONFIRMED MY THOUGHTS ABOUT THE SYSTEM THANKS AGAIN CHRIS.........
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Old 05-15-2010, 01:12 AM   #13
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Default Re: PIGGYBACK BATTERIES

Quote:
Originally Posted by chris
WELL FIRST OF ALL I WANT TO THANK ALL FOR THEIR INPUT,AND YES I WILL BE RESTARTING WITH TWO NEW BATTERIES, BECAUSE THE ONBOARD CHARGER SHORTED AND FRIED THE EXISTING ONE,WHEN I GO CAMPING ,THATS WHEN I GET ALL MY MOVIE WATCHING IN. SO I LIKE TO HAVE PLENTY BATT POWER THAT WILL LAST ALMOST DOUBLE THE TIME AS ONE BATTERY.BECAUSE FOR ME WHEN THE POWER GOES DOWN IT'S PRETTY MUCH TIME TO HEAD BACK HOME.OR FIND A PLACE TO PLUG IN THE BATT CHARGER TO CHARGE THE ONE BATT ,I THINK TWO BATTS WOULD PRETTY MUCH DO THE JOB.ALSO IT'S PRETTY MUCH ALMOST SUMMER HERE IN AZ AND I CAN USE THEM TO RUN THE A/C LOL (JUST KIDDING) ANYWAYS THANKSFOR EVERYTHING GUYS AND GALS CHRIS IN PHOENIX AZ
No problem. I think we're still discussing the identical replacement batteries issue.
You solved it by cooking your only battery, so 2 new ones is a no-brainer.
Unless you're appliances are real wattage/amperage hogs, 2 batts will be a lot better.

Try to check the current draw on various 12V (or 110-120V AC) devices you use, when you're dry camping.
Just run your RV engine for a while if your batteries are draining, it should recharge them somewhat.

When you're considering buying a new anything for your RV, power consumption is really important.
There are many newer TVs, and DVD/CD players and such that are designed to use a lot less electricity.
For example, I use an AC powered TV plugged into a small portable 150W inverter that plugs into my coach
batteries via a cigar lighter type outlet. The TV is a Sharp LCD flat screen (LC19SB27UT) and the nominal
draw is 29W. That's one of the lowest draws around, except possibly the newer LED TVs (I think Samsung
makes a few, but they're expensive) for energy consumption. I bought the TV because it's not an energy
vampire.

Anyway, good luck with the movie theatre on wheels.
Maybe we'll see you around sometime, we like northern AZ a lot, and will
probably be out there this fall at Grand Canyon, or near Page, and/or Lake Powell.
Mike.
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Old 05-15-2010, 02:10 AM   #14
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Default Re: PIGGYBACK BATTERIES

THEATER ON WHEELS .LOL I LIKE THAT ,AND THANKS FOR THE INFO ,MY VAN /B IS A 79 COBRA CL/B SO IT'SNO SECRET SOME THINGS MIGHT NEED UPGRADING .I TOOK THE ONBOARD CHARGER OUT BECAUSE I HAVE A CHARGER I USE NO PROBLEM THERE, BUT I THINK I HAVE ANOTHER ISSUE WHICH IT DOESN'T SEEM TO BE CHARGING FROM THE ENGINE /GENERATOR .I TOOK THE CABLES OFF THE BATT IN THE BACK AND JUST USED A LIGHT TESTOR TO SEE IF ANY POWER WAS COMING TO THE COACH BATTERY VIA THE CABLES WITH THE ENGINE RUNNING ,THERE IS AN ISOLATOR UNDER THE HOOD SO I ASSUMED IT MUST BE ATTACHED TO THE COACH BATT ,OF COURSE TO CHG. IT .SO THOUGHI HAVEN'T USED IT YET I ORDERED ONLINE ,A CIG OUTLET TO CIG OUTLET TO CHG.THE BATT WHILE I DRIVE BECAUSE I DON'T KNOW ANYTHING ABOUT THIS ISOLATOR.YES THERES ALWAYS TWO WAYS TO SKIN A CAT,(OFCOURSE I WOULDN'T SAY THAT IN FRONT OF MY CAT)LOL SO TELL ME WHAT YOU THINK THANKS AGAIN CHRIS.
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Old 05-15-2010, 11:49 AM   #15
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Default Re: PIGGYBACK BATTERIES

With the engine running, the van's alternator should be sending about 14V to your
coach battery, (and to your engine battery) via the isolator/converter/charger.
If you know how to use a multi-meter, test each battery (engine and coach)
while the engine is running (black lead to neg terminal, red lead to pos terminal)
and see how much juice is getting to them.
It would be a starting point to see if your engine alternator charging system is
doing what it's supposed to do. You can deal with genset (if you have one) or
shore power charging (built in converter/charger or inverter) later.
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Old 05-15-2010, 04:34 PM   #16
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Default Re: PIGGYBACK BATTERIES

Chris (and others). There is a whole lot of information moving back and forth here that makes it apparent that Chris needs to have someone with experience and knowledge of 12 electrical circuits do this work to do it right. The solution you propose, Chris, is not adequate (the cigar lighter plug idea). The isolator won't show it is working without a load on it. The batteries need to be the same ratings. There's great possibility in what you propose as a system to cost yourself some big money. And RV electrician can do it right for less.
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Old 05-15-2010, 06:10 PM   #17
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Default Re: PIGGYBACK BATTERIES

thanks for the info ,i know the alt is working but i don't think juice is getting to the house batt .i'll have the mech check it eventually .thanks again chris
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Old 05-15-2010, 09:16 PM   #18
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Default Re: PIGGYBACK BATTERIES

Quote:
Originally Posted by VernM
Chris (and others). There is a whole lot of information moving back and forth here that makes it apparent that Chris needs to have someone with experience and knowledge of 12 electrical circuits do this work to do it right. The solution you propose, Chris, is not adequate (the cigar lighter plug idea). The isolator won't show it is working without a load on it. The batteries need to be the same ratings. There's great possibility in what you propose as a system to cost yourself some big money. And RV electrician can do it right for less.
Good advice, Vern. Should have asked you about the battery question I have.
What's the techie explanation as to why the batteries need to be the same "ratings"?
By "ratings", do you mean both deep cycle or exactly the same batteries, with the same
capacities, or all AGMs, or all lead acid wet cells, or all gels?
I've been googling the heck out of it since Mike borught it up, and can't find anything
approaching a tech answer.
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Old 05-15-2010, 11:38 PM   #19
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Default Re: PIGGYBACK BATTERIES

mike,while i was writing one of these post it occured to me about needing a draw for the iso to react, thus the way the system works under the hood .you did confirm a thought lol thanks for the info .chris in phx.
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Old 05-16-2010, 12:51 AM   #20
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Default Re: PIGGYBACK BATTERIES

A few notes:

Multiple 12 volt batteries are connected in parallel ( + to + ) and ( - to - ) as already mentioned in this topic.

Two 6 volt batteries would be connected in series ( + to - ).

Chris - Check for a blown fuse or circuit breaker between the isolator and the house battery. My Roadtrek had a 30 amp breaker on that line.

Mike - re: matching batteries - I think it just something we all "know" without most of us knowing why. It is readily apparent on smaller batteries. Take a flashlight that takes two D cell batteries for instance. I think D cells are 1.5 volts. If you measure a new one it will probably be 1.6 volts. So your flashlight stops working and you take out the two batteries and they measure 1.1 volts each. Sure you can probably get your flashlight working again by adding one new battery but it won't last as long as it would if you replaced both batteries. I suspect that your flashlight would be basically "running" mostly off of the new battery until it was used up. In the case of new and old 12v batteries in parallel then I'd guess that the new one would really doing most of the work until it becomes prematurely old.

I think you will find out the answer and I'd like to know as well.
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