tx2sturgis said:Yep, it works for me and a lot cheaper than the b2b bidness.
tx2sturgis, I don't think b2b's keep starter battery charged. I know mine doesn't. BB1260
gapper2 said:
tx2sturgis, I don't think b2b's keep starter battery charged. I know mine doesn't. BB1260
WalkaboutTed said:"I Have the CTEK D250S and SmartPass on two vehicles. They work well and though we have separate charge controllers for the permanent solar, I have plugs set up for portable solar. Which I haven't used since I went on the road in 10/2017. Even cloudy and rainy days I get back to full by mid afternoon. Negatives to the CTEK units? Expensive and non-adjustable."
My BB1260 was expensive and adjustable and has no solar input but I have a solar controller to handle that. I use a switch setting to keep my starter battery charged. I paid $30 more than what the blue sea 7622 cost on amazon this morning which is what the OP was originally considering. Got to do your shopping.
My purchase decision was based on a future lithium house battery purchase and the AMP starved Odyssey batteries I now have.
One thing to consider is whether your alternator can handle the strain. As Half Shadow mentioned in a earlier post without some way of limiting your current flow other than a very fickle alternator internal voltage regulator, you run a good chance of destroying your alternator with a battery bank such as lithium or even the AGM's I have.
I ran a test yesterday. My battery bank 200 AH AGM's were down to 78% from full. I used a 100 amp capable manual charger from shore power. The batteries took in 76 amps on the bulk portion of the charge and took over an hour to get to an absorption voltage. 3 more hours to get to 100% as measured by an ending current of .4 amps. That kind of unrestricted initial current flow would probably destroy most stock alternators without VERY careful monitoring. And will probably have me looking into a future alternator upgrade.
The b2b I have is certainly not for everyone. It has to be mounted indoors. It's fairly large. And the controls are somewhat cryptic. but if you have no problem with pushing buttons (or mashing buttons as we say in the south ) you won't have too much trouble
Another thing to consider is the wire run from starter to house battery to answer the OP's question from another post. For my unit the manuacturer recommended 4 AWG. For an isolator or relay setup that would probably be much larger.
With the ability to use the alternator as a programmable multistage charger and to limit the current to a safe level for my alternator, I am happy with my purchase even though I will probably need a larger alternator soon. Can you say "More money"? :-/
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