After the experience with the alternator, I still wonder. It works for years, then suddenly a new wire is required. I need to figure out what is going on.
Can you guys help me understand the logic behind the charging?
There are, to my understanding, three major components:
1. The boat has two batteries: one starter battery, one housing (housing is in reality a bank of two, but we can simplify).
2. There is one alternator on board. It outputs +12V and is wired to ground. +12V output goes to the Sure Power 1202 battery isolator. In addition there is one DF wire which is connected to +12V.
3. In the engine compartment, there's a Sure Power Battery Isolator 1202.
Questions:
* What is the purpose of the DF wire going to the alternator? My assumption is: It tells the alternator the level of voltage and depending on that, the alternator will regulate its power output. If voltage is above X, lower output, if below: increase. Correct?
* The starter battery should always be prioritized when charging. How is this decision made? What is the component that making this decision? Is this the Sure Power 1202? I think, the 1202's job is to prevent current from flowing from one battery to another and therefore run through the alternator, which would fry it. I did not find any proof that it would reroute FROM the alternator to the weaker starter battery and then switch over to housing.
* What battery does the DF connector be wired to? In my case, it was connected to the housing battery, now it is connected to the starter battery. Before the change, the starter battery would go above 15V and an alarm would trigger. Housing would never charge. Now, they do.
This is driving me crazy. The trouble for me is that the old installation has worked for more than 10 years. Now, suddenly, we need to switch things around!?? This cannot be true.