magentawave
Adventurer
Thank you everyone for your input!
And when you say "earthed to the high side of the shunt" you mean that I should connect a ground wire from the frame to one of the bolts on the top of the shunt instead of showing it like I did where it appears to come off the same ground wire that goes to the fuse block?
Its an old 1982 Toyota and alternators for Toyota trucks were very small back then. I'm pretty sure this alternator only puts out about 40 to 50 amps. I was thinking of replacing it with a high capacity 150 to 250 amp GM alternator but someone told me to not bother because it wouldn't make any difference when charging the house batteries.
Would the Blue Sea Automatic Charging Relay replace the existing solenoid and is it worth installing with such a small alternator?
Is there any particular brand of breaker I should buy?
And when you say "earthed to the high side of the shunt" you mean that I should connect a ground wire from the frame to one of the bolts on the top of the shunt instead of showing it like I did where it appears to come off the same ground wire that goes to the fuse block?
Its an old 1982 Toyota and alternators for Toyota trucks were very small back then. I'm pretty sure this alternator only puts out about 40 to 50 amps. I was thinking of replacing it with a high capacity 150 to 250 amp GM alternator but someone told me to not bother because it wouldn't make any difference when charging the house batteries.
Would the Blue Sea Automatic Charging Relay replace the existing solenoid and is it worth installing with such a small alternator?
-- For the shunt to work (that is, allow the TriMetric or other meter to give a valid reading) is is critical that none of your camper circuits be earthed directly to the frame; they must all be earthed to the high side of the shunt. The shunt must be the ONLY path to earth (or ground).
-- Junk the solenoid you have under the hood and all of the related wiring. The wires are much too small to ever allow you to get a good charge from your truck's alternator. There are tables that will allow you to size things properly, but a a gross rule of thumb you can expect a 1/0 cable to pass about 75A. How big is your truck's alternator? You need a cable big enough to carry the full output at least 15 feet.
I would recommend using the appropriate Blue Sea Automatic Charging Relay. http://www.bluesea.com/products/category/Automatic_Charging_Relays This will have the advantage of allowing your solar kit to charge your starter batteries at the same time.
OK, a third and fourth comment:
-- None of this will work unless your truck's alternator produces at least 14.2v at 70F. (That being the minimum voltage for most deep cycle AGM batteries.)
-- Your cabling, down from the roof, from your solar controller to your camper batteries, and between your starter and camper batteries is large enough. Voltage drop on 12v systems is fatal. You need to aim for no more than 0.5v drop; less would be even better.
Good luck!
Is there any particular brand of breaker I should buy?
It's a breaker.
View attachment 215629
Required. I like breakers, some others like fuses. It's recommended to use 175 Amp or better between batteries.
Copied from my post in Bbasso's thread about his isolator.