AndySpill
Well-Known Member
- First Name
- Andy
- Joined
- Oct 24, 2023
- Threads
- 71
- Messages
- 1,654
- Reaction score
- 1,270
- Location
- Pittsburgh
- Vehicle(s)
- 2018 JL Sahara
And I contend that this power draw between the dissimilarly drained batteries, one brought back into parallel just before the post ESS crank, along with appliances, and the engine starter (right, you don't read unless you buy into it as well--the same guy who thinks dissimilar battery sizes in the dual AGL JLs is...."adequate" because he read somewhere that batteries can be hooked up in parallel if the same voltage and chemistry with no regard to dissimilar size or usage case) is less taxing on the main battery (and therefore more "focused") than your one battery taking the direct hit from these appliances.Sorry. I didn’t read anything I thought was logical. For example, you wrote this: “The two battery system may cutoff at the same voltage threshold for the JL as if there was one battery, but under the two battery system the battery responsible for the bulk of the cranking power under a 2 battery system, i.e. the main battery, is sparred during the ESS event so that it may focus its power on the crank.”
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When cranking, the 2 batteries are effectively 1. If one battery is weaker than the other, the weak battery will draw power from the strong one, regardless of which battery it is. There is no focus.
This voltage equalization between the 2 AGM Dual batteries begins when they are reunited at the end of the ESS event and continues after the engine cranks and the alternator then replenishes both batteries. It's not an instantaneous thing. It happens over time, just as does both their replenishment by the alternator, which is why it's less of a hit to the main cranking battery than an already taxed one main battery of comparable or even slightly larger size that you propose.
Then, there's the theory that Stellantis used two batteries, at least in part, that I didn't even mention until now, to better regulate voltage for the entertainment appliances (and why?... because using two batteries does a better job of that than one comparable sized or slightly larger sized one) that your one battery idea doesn't address as well.
I guess you reject this notion of two batteries providing greater voltage stability because it sure would have been cheaper and better than that Aux battery if Stellantis could have pulled off one battery, even if slightly bigger than an H7 size in its non E-Torque ESS implementations (i.e. 3.6, 2.0 engines).
And unlike you, when I don't agree with you, I still read.
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