dwh, again thank you for taking the time to explain this in detail and piece by piece, it has taken me several reads to start getting a handle, but I need to re-read a few more times to put all together. It seems my initial plan of upgrading components for the sake of it may not be necessary.
The Magnatek is a power distribution box with a converter (AC to DC). It takes incoming AC and passes it though its breakers to feed AC loads, and also powers up its converter to feed DC loads. Without incoming AC (shore power or generator), the AC circuits are dead, but the DC circuits are still live because it also has a connection for a battery. With incoming AC the converter is both supplying the DC circuits, and also supplying a few amps of fixed voltage (probably 13.6v or so) to the battery. This can keep a battery "maintained" but doesn't do a good job of charging a low battery.
So lets see if I have basics, the electrical systems consists of 110V AC and 12V DC appliances powered thru the 45 amp Magnatek. The Magnatek Converter is
required to turn 110V AC to 12V DC - correct?
* 110V AC comes frm shore power or generator.
* 12V DC comes from Magnatek inverter when running the generator or when plugged into shore power, or simply the two coach batteries when no shore power or generator running.
110V AC runs Converter, microwave, frig, A/C, DSS and GFI protected receptacles for apploances
12V DC runs appliances except for A/C and microwave
My goal is to be able to power a light fixture or two (one fixture has to 13watt flouro bulbs and lights up whole place pretty good), recharge ipad/iphone, water pump, charge Bose mini or run coach stereo, run TV when hooked up to Iphone/ipad, Furnace for amount depending on how cold (I have Mr. Heater Buddy that can take up furnace place if furnace burns too much power), and maybe frig. Not sure if I missed anything.
Now, with both the Magnatek and an inverter/charger, it should be rigged so that incoming AC feeds into the inverter/charger, which then feeds AC to the Magnatek. Thus, both the AC and the DC circuits coming out of the Magnatek are live all the time - the AC being fed by the inverter, and the DC being fed by the Magnatek's DC converter.
This would make sense. However, in that sort of setup, it would be wise to NOT have the Magnatek's battery connection hooked up. It would be dumb to take DC power from the battery, invert it to AC, feed it to the Magnatek, which converts it back to DC and then feeds it back into the battery. It won't break anything, but as long as the inverter is turned on, it would cause a loop that steady drains the battery.
Which may be the reason for your original post about battery drain...
But the caveat is that if the Magnatek's battery connection was not hooked up, then when the inverter was turned off, both the AC and DC circuits coming out of the Magnatek would be dead.
So you have to either live with everything being dead with the inverter turned off, or you have to rig the DC circuits direct to the battery and not fed by the Magnatek's converter. Or you live with that drain loop.
So it seems I need to check to see if my Magnateks battery connection is hooked up and if so better to rig DC circuits direct to battery instead of converter?
But the caveat is that if the Magnatek's battery connection was not hooked up, then when the inverter was turned off, both the AC and DC circuits coming out of the Magnatek would be dead.
If so, is there any downside to this? Or, with battery disconnected from Magnatek are we just bypassing Magnatek when boondocking and have appliances running straight off battery, skipping the Magnatek converter? Would my low voltage alarm still work?