Thanks Guys for chipping with a response, Because I had a Mitsubishi 2.5 TD SUV and it came factory fitted with Twin Batteries, It only had about 70,000 on the Clock when I got it and the first thing I did was replace the batteries and Oil etc as you Do when you get another vehicle, But a year later the batteries died, So again I bought another set of 85Ah Batteries only this time I sat a 15w solar panel on the dash and hooked it up to the main battery, Again they lost power, It did have a very small parasitic drain caused by the Alarm system but not enough to drain both batteries in about 6 weeks But sure enough within 3 weeks the batteries were flat,
This got me thinking that the factory Duel Battery charging system is either very Lazy or badly setup I think the Alternator was around the 85/90Ah mark, When you started it you would hear the solenoid click and then it would click back possibly changing from one battery to the other, But not once did I hear them changing/clicking when the vehicle was going down the road,
This makes me think that the system they use is not a proper Duel battery system, meaning it clicks over to the 2nd battery to start and then goes back to number 1 once it is running and then it only charges either battery once its voltage gets below a certain point at rest I checked the batteries and it was quite common to see both of them around the 12.4 to 12.6v mark which tells me that these systems are not set up to keep Duel batteries at their peak, Which brings back to whats going on with this powerstroke/7.3 or what ever it's called, because a good battery should be able to start the 2.5 I had or a 7.3,
I think it might pay in the long run to ditch the factory Duel system and fit an after market system that is designed to keep both batteries at their peak, My newer Shogun still has the 2.5 TDI in it and only a single battery setup but I will change all that at some point, But factory Duel systems just don't manage the power like an Off Road systems does.