Well, I read now a couple of times the Diode isolator causes a voltage drop.
So far so good.That's correct.
Did anyone of you has used a diode isolator in the past?
Gents: It is a Sure Power isolator with an extra "E" regulator input!
Are you blind?
This compensates the voltage drop just by increasing the alternator output voltage about the same amount of the diode voltage drop simply by routing one contact of the regulator brush directly into the diode E reg input....
I'm using Sure Power since a couple of years (by the way, they are in business since 1959) and never had any problems with undercharged batteries.
That is a myth created by folks not knowing either how to use them or how they work.
Diode isolators simply do their job.
If you want trouble - then go with solenoids. I wouldn't look back into that direction.
Sure power even sells a diode coupler to charge a single battery with two alternators.
Does this looks like a voltage drop?
It's a Battery monitor measuring the charge current (10.0A) and voltage (14.2V) directly in front of the supply battery poles (about 15 feet behind the battery diode isolator!):
And you can see that the battery (Optima yellow top) is about 80% charged, still being charged with a current of 10 A.