THAW
Well-Known Member
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- Foster
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- 23 JL4DrRubicon
Unless you are disconnecting the batteries and charging them separately, does the precision of the charger for ideal charging matter?
For a charger with a given Amp rating and a basic AGM charging routine including constant-current Bulk, constant-voltage Absorption, and constant-voltage Float stages, it's not clear to me transition thresholds would be significantly different between a single battery and a slightly larger-capacity bank, assuming the same temperature. Perhaps tail current would vary if the charger estimates capacity, but that's unlikely to have a meaningful effect if the batteries in the bank are all in decent condition.Ok, but my question was a response to @THAW regarding how the charger is connected to the battery impacting charging precision, not about old school chargers. The implication of my question is that charging both batteries at the same time has more affect on charging precision then long cables.
The concern for long runs of unknown gauge factory harness wires and body ground paths is excessive voltage drop interfering with voltage/current regulation. It may or may not be an issue depending on the attachment point, but whether charging an individual battery or a bank it's preferable to connect the charger's built-in wiring/connectors near the battery/batteries.
Manufacturer-recommended extension cables with stated compatibility for the charger model are clearly acceptable. Still, I'd be curious about the voltage drop on the 16 AWG 10' extension in conjunction with the 10 A charger.I just added some 6' SAE cables to my JL and JT to facilitate charging the batteries without opening the hood. While I agree with @THAW 's long cable comment in theory, I was looking for specific information related the impact longer cables have on battery charging. Not only did I not find any information related to cable length, I found NOCO sells 10' extensions to their cables with no mention of the extension affecting charging.
If both batteries in a bank are in decent condition, presumably the individual current acceptance at a given voltage will be roughly proportional to the individual battery capacities.Since the ideal agm charging rate is .1C to .2C, for the 12Ah aux battery that would be 1.2A to 2.4A. For connected batteries, if I connect a 10A charger to the main battery, I wonder what the charging rate is to the aux battery. Whatever it is, it's probably not as bad for the aux battery as this 15V charging that I see occasionally.
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