Steve and Karen
Ranger
I'm finally getting around to putting in the Renogy 30A DC-DC charger. I have the unit location and wiring runs figured out (right side bin into the foot of the mattress and a hidden loop back in to the battery compartment).
The Renogy has a number of other wired connections such as temperature probe, Bluetooth, Voltage Sensor and ignition wire. None of those are causing me (yet) to scratch my head as much as the main connections. (PDF below)
This unit, like the CTEK, can also function as a battery isolator. Presumably, if it is installed correctly in its proper place in the proper electrical "chain".
I've determined that the alternator/charge wire is the thick black wire attached to the bottom of the +BAT post in the jpg.
View attachment upload_2024-4-16_13-42-31.jpeg
My question is: in order to maintain the unit's function as a battery isolator, must I remove the alternator wire from the post, fix it to a 40A fuse, and from there, run it to the DC-DC, and back to the +BAT post? i.e. make the DC-DC the first and only thing the car alternator "sees" when sending a current to the trailer?
The only other configuration for the main wiring that I can even conceive involves coming directly off the +BAT post, to the DC-DC, and back to the + terminal of the trailer battery. I'm pretty sure that would still allow the DC-DC to fully charge the battery, but at the expense of not isolating it. And maybe messing something else up.
How close am I?
Of course the manufacture install notes don't touch on where to put this in the "system", nor speak of its relationship with power disconnect switches, AC-DC chargers, and the like. The PDF diagram is "simple" to say the least. Too simple.
I'm not worrying about the solar connects at the moment. I want to see how this operates first.
(And yes... the scorched wires in the photo are from a long-ago mishap.)
Thanks in advance for any insight.
The Renogy has a number of other wired connections such as temperature probe, Bluetooth, Voltage Sensor and ignition wire. None of those are causing me (yet) to scratch my head as much as the main connections. (PDF below)
This unit, like the CTEK, can also function as a battery isolator. Presumably, if it is installed correctly in its proper place in the proper electrical "chain".
I've determined that the alternator/charge wire is the thick black wire attached to the bottom of the +BAT post in the jpg.
View attachment upload_2024-4-16_13-42-31.jpeg
My question is: in order to maintain the unit's function as a battery isolator, must I remove the alternator wire from the post, fix it to a 40A fuse, and from there, run it to the DC-DC, and back to the +BAT post? i.e. make the DC-DC the first and only thing the car alternator "sees" when sending a current to the trailer?
The only other configuration for the main wiring that I can even conceive involves coming directly off the +BAT post, to the DC-DC, and back to the + terminal of the trailer battery. I'm pretty sure that would still allow the DC-DC to fully charge the battery, but at the expense of not isolating it. And maybe messing something else up.
How close am I?
Of course the manufacture install notes don't touch on where to put this in the "system", nor speak of its relationship with power disconnect switches, AC-DC chargers, and the like. The PDF diagram is "simple" to say the least. Too simple.
I'm not worrying about the solar connects at the moment. I want to see how this operates first.
(And yes... the scorched wires in the photo are from a long-ago mishap.)
Thanks in advance for any insight.