Josh — you’re correct, thanks for the clarification. The main negative bus
needs to be on the “Load” side of the shunt, if you have one installed. And
Joel: the negative side of all DC systems in the boat should terminate at one
point. This should include batteries (or banks of them), the DC
Edd, if you have a current shunt (which you do if you use your Link 2000)
it is normally on the ground wire. You should make sure all you charging
sources go to the load side, not the battery side, of the shunt.
Josh Muckley
S/V Sea Hawk
1989 C&C 37+
Solomons, MD
On Apr 30, 2015 11:56 AM, "Edd Sc
Joel,
My goal is to charge the house bank (so I’d connect it to the house bank
positive bus bar). My ground is common to all batteries so I wanted to make
sure I’d still charge the house (the ACR will automatically charge the engine
battery anyway).
Love this list.
All the best,
Edd
Edd
Fred,
If it goes to the bus bars won't it charge all batteries on the live
circuit, not a single battery?
Not sure if that is Edd's goal.
Joel
On Thu, Apr 30, 2015 at 11:51 AM, Frederick G Street via CnC-List <
cnc-list@cnc-list.com> wrote:
> Hi, Edd — the negative side of the charger output c
Fred,
That’s what I thought. An installation manual threw me for a few. . . .
Thanks for the clarification.
Sheesh — more fuses… more fuses…
I’m now going to call you Fred “The Fuse-Man” Street
All the best,
Edd
Edd M. Schillay
Starship Enterprise
C&C 37+ | Sail No: NCC-1701-B
City Isla
Hi, Edd — the negative side of the charger output can go straight to the main
negative bus bar; this should have a large conductor straight to the negative
sides of both the house and start banks. DO NOT just grab any local ground
point, as the connection from it to the battery may not be sound
Listers,
For a shore-powered battery charger, do the red and black wires need to run to
the battery or can the red run to the battery and the black to any common
ground on the boat?
In other words, does the black need to connect directly to the negative
terminal on the battery?
All the bes