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a common DC ground is used a lot in welding, so I would not think there would be a problem with a vehicle
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I like the word deuce spelled the way it's supposed to be - d e u c e and proud.i like my duce the way it its. Bone stock and Proud!, people that spend all this crazy money, are just spending money.
i suppose you can mod anything, but then its just not as cool as it was before.
I believe the point of his original suggestion was if the total "12 volt" load was exceeded the capacity of the normal 12 volt system - IOW, if you are drawing more amps from the 12 v (first) battery than from the second (24 v).If you could add a 12 volt alt to one battery and still have the 24 volt alt charging both batteries( in series) and have it( the 24 volt alt) charge correctly, you wouldn't need the 12 volt alt in the first place. You could load the first battery with your accessories and it would charge as JasonS said it would(with unequal battery states) , but it won't. Those of us that have "been there and done that" know this. Your Advanced degree ain't worth the paper it's printed on. Electricity is NOT basic math.
WRONG WRONG WRONG...
Now I'm done, Sorry Dug.
I have to agree with this point, to me it's the same as using a std vehicle to jump a deuce. You simply connect the jumper cables from your POV to each battery separately. even when the deuce cracks up and runs and you still have the POV connected nothing special happens, it works perfectly fine.My point is that you CAN connect a 12V alternator to the midpoint of the batterys and it WILL work. I don't care about any other ancillary points.
The first locomotive runs the show. The rest are slaved to the master. One brain.Think of it this way. Say you had a train with two locomotives. Let's pretend that one locomotive is 1000 hp and the other is 2000 hp, and that the train needs 2500 hp to move. How much power does each locomotive deliver? Answer is that is does not matter, it is driven by the throttle settings of each engine, and the engines themselves never know that the train is requiring more power than each engine can produce by itself.
Power is power.
Yes, but that is not the point. Each locomotive does not know that there are other locomotives. That's the same as multiple alternators. The train does not know how many locomotives there are. That's the same as the load in an electrical circuit.The first locomotive runs the show. The rest are slaved to the master. One brain.
Rat4spd and I know a couple things about trains. Working for the railroad was the ONLY job our dad ever had, well except for those two years in Korea.Yes, but that is not the point. Each locomotive does not know that there are other locomotives. That's the same as multiple alternators. The train does not know how many locomotives there are. That's the same as the load in an electrical circuit.
To round out your analogy, in the old days there was no 'brain'. There was an engineer in each engine and they would coordinate throttle activity. At any moment in time, #1 might be doing more work than #2, and vice versa.
I was once on a double-header steam train where the engineers got crossed up. #1 engineer was throttling back and #2 opened it up. #2 pushed #1's tender up enough to cause it to derail. That was on the side of a mountain in the winter and it was not the most pleasant evening.
That's very cool.Rat4spd and I know a couple things about trains. Working for the railroad was the ONLY job our dad ever had, well except for those two years in Korea.
When I was 10 or 11 I "drove" a train with three engines, 19 cars and for some reason 2 cabooses. All of my brothers and sister got to drive at some time in our childhood.
It's entirely the point. Two alternators equal two voltage regulators trying to regulate voltage on the same battery, except one is also charging the other battery.Which regulator wins?Yes, but that is not the point.
Whichever one wants to. They work it out for themselves, automagically, moment by moment.It's entirely the point. Two alternators equal two voltage regulators trying to regulate voltage on the same battery, except one is also charging the other battery.Which regulator wins?
I can relate to that LOL. But in that we have hot and cold fighting each other. A closer example might be if you had two engines, each water cooled and plumbed to the same heater core. Which engine is heating the vehicle? It doesn't matter.An example of chaos with two things in auto: My former Silverado with dual climate control......my wife liked it hot, I liked it cool. In the end, mine was all the way cold, hers was all the way hot.....it sucked for the both of us.
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