Many battery set up check it out

Isolators = bad for audio use, they cause .4V loss just from powering them. The more reserve power you have (ie large batteries) the harder it will be to drop below 12.5V Anything above is coming from the ALT, there is some charge above 12.5 in the batteries, but more of a surface charge then anything.

1/0 is more then sufficient between batteries - REMEMBER the shorter the run, the smaller the wire can be. 1 foot of 4 gauge can handle some serious juice. Going all out though, 1/0 @ 1ft will handle well over 5500A!!! at the same loss as 20ft of 1/0 at 275A just an FYI......

 
Isolators = bad for audio use, they cause .4V loss just from powering them. The more reserve power you have (ie large batteries) the harder it will be to drop below 12.5V Anything above is coming from the ALT, there is some charge above 12.5 in the batteries, but more of a surface charge then anything.
1/0 is more then sufficient between batteries - REMEMBER the shorter the run, the smaller the wire can be. 1 foot of 4 gauge can handle some serious juice. Going all out though, 1/0 @ 1ft will handle well over 5500A!!! at the same loss as 20ft of 1/0 at 275A just an FYI......
in other words Isolators ****!!!!

 
i havent charged my battery for almost a yr and every saturday i charge race car batteries on it for 4 or 5 hours @6 amps voltage. at rest 13v,with key on, headlights on stereo on slightly (1/4 up) still reads 12.8...a good battery that rests at 12.5 can take a while to charge back up. from a 14.2 volt power supply it can draw 5+ amps for a few hours even wet cells

 
Isolators = bad for audio use, they cause .4V loss just from powering them. The more reserve power you have (ie large batteries) the harder it will be to drop below 12.5V Anything above is coming from the ALT, there is some charge above 12.5 in the batteries, but more of a surface charge then anything.
1/0 is more then sufficient between batteries - REMEMBER the shorter the run, the smaller the wire can be. 1 foot of 4 gauge can handle some serious juice. Going all out though, 1/0 @ 1ft will handle well over 5500A!!! at the same loss as 20ft of 1/0 at 275A just an FYI......
is there an extra zero there? good to know either way.

I can and will run 3/0 into my amps:D

 
No, no extra zero that is Five Thousand Five hundered amps, based on voltage loss @12v for 1ft of copper 1/0 cable you will have 9.25% loss over that 1ft run. The SAME loss you get on 20ft @ 275A (all on a 12V circuit)

Thats why I stated, 4 gauge at 1 foot can handle some juice, like 1800A at a foot, crazy, I know but the math says it works......

 
Activity
No one is currently typing a reply...
Old Thread: Please note, there have been no replies in this thread for over 3 years!
Content in this thread may no longer be relevant.
Perhaps it would be better to start a new thread instead.

About this thread

jeeper07

5,000+ posts
Rebuilding&Reconstruc ting
Thread starter
jeeper07
Joined
Location
Indianapolis, IN
Start date
Participants
Who Replied
Replies
22
Views
1,259
Last reply date
Last reply from
audiolife
1778578257023.png

Glen Rodgers

    May 12, 2026
  • 0
  • 0
Screenshot_20260511_212804_Amazon Shopping.jpg

Blackout67

    May 11, 2026
  • 0
  • 0

New threads

Top