M1008driver
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- Great Falls, Montana
Every time someone asks about converting to 12 volt I hear how great the 24 volt system is for starting and how the 12 volt will not start in the winter.
I risk going out on a limb to say not necessarily...
When two batteries are connected in parallel they double the cranking amps, thus with a quality starter should have no trouble starting in the coldest of winters.
For example:
An Optima D31A has 900 CCA (Cold Cranking Amps 0 degress F). In parallel that is 1800 CCA.
The same battery has 1125 CA (Cranking Amps 32 degress F). In parallel that is 2250 CA.
As you can see in theory you should not have any problem with batteries in parallel during the winter. You will be cranking with the power of two batteries, not one as in series. I know the die hard purists will not want to hear this, but these are the facts that have been left out every time someone asks about converting to 12 volt.
I risk going out on a limb to say not necessarily...
When two batteries are connected in parallel they double the cranking amps, thus with a quality starter should have no trouble starting in the coldest of winters.
For example:
An Optima D31A has 900 CCA (Cold Cranking Amps 0 degress F). In parallel that is 1800 CCA.
The same battery has 1125 CA (Cranking Amps 32 degress F). In parallel that is 2250 CA.
As you can see in theory you should not have any problem with batteries in parallel during the winter. You will be cranking with the power of two batteries, not one as in series. I know the die hard purists will not want to hear this, but these are the facts that have been left out every time someone asks about converting to 12 volt.
Cranking Power
- Most vehicles are fitted with a single lead-acid battery. The battery powers the starter motor that cranks the engine. In cold weather, a battery may not deliver sufficient amps to power the motor. A second battery, hooked up in parallel, doubles the amps available.