Used to be that the military used a lot of checklists, I doubt that has changed. We'd have a checklist for going to the john, I swear. OK so that's overdoing it but the point is valid, for those more important things (like making sure the batteries don't get drained unnecessarily) a checklist is still useful. If you make up a medium sized card, laminate it, put it on a string or chain so it can't wander, and then put it in a prominent place then you only have to make a habit of looking at it every once in awhile and soon you will know it by heart. Better still you can add those things that you keep asking, "Now which way did it go?" and remove the doubt. Jim
Mike, I haven't looked at this closely but my first instinct is to add a separate alternator for the "house batteries" and set that for AGM. You'd have redundancy and a source of charge that you can set to the exact needed voltage.But that may be over-thinking.
I'm still at the beginning of my bus project and i have been thinking for a while about this battery bank vs alternator charging.Since AGM batteries need a special charging algorithm, an alternator alone won't do!What i'm thinking about for the house batteries is to have separate charger for each battery fed by an inverter or two or shore power.Maybe four 8d (AGM). While under way, the alternator (let's say 450-500 amps 24v) would fed the inverters to supply 110-120 VAC to fridge, water heater and battery chargers. For sure it would require a lot of high amps relay to isolate each battery in the bank while in charge mode.What do you think ?
I'm by no means an expert if you have ever read any of my posts but I'm confused with your statement. As long as I'm either connected to shore power or running the generator, my inverter charges my 2 house AGM batteries. My assumption is that's the norm when having an inverter but maybe I'm wrong about it.My alternator charges my start batteries btw. I don't understand why you think you need a separate charger for your house batteries.
...Yes, will look at the Sterling products. Thanks !
Sounds like you have an inverter/charger. When you are plugged in, it acts like a charger for your house batteries. When you're not plugged in, it draws from your batteries and puts out 120vac. ...