second battery ground question.

blackga
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instead of running a ground wire all the way from the front battery, can i just ground the second battery to the chassis and be done with it???? just would like to know because my room for running 0 ga wiring therew the firewall is limited as hell.

 
i just drilled a hole in my floor board that was close to my 2nd batt and close to a chasis hole and grounded that way....i look at it the battery up front is grounded to the same chasis so its not gonna hurt anything.

 
my opinion? ground to the chassis\frame and run a ground all the way back. put your positive and negative leads in a PVC pipe and mount it to the bottom of the car, then have it come up through the trunk. that way you don't have to go through the firewall.

 
So the entire steel frame of a car would somehow have more resistance than a relatively thin 16ft piece of copper wire?

I've been doing multiple batteries for 15 years and I always just ground as close to the battery as possible.

 
i just drilled a hole in my floor board that was close to my 2nd batt and close to a chasis hole and grounded that way....i look at it the battery up front is grounded to the same chasis so its not gonna hurt anything.
i was thinking the same way. a ground is a ground. the other battery i installed i used a negative run and grounded it also but like i mentioned i dont have the room now.

 
Depends on the chassis, if it is a unibody there is no chassis front to back but rather sub frames. I have seen a few systems not charge properly from picking a bad ground. Takes more than a few seconds to see if the ground is good or bad. If for example you KNOW your alt puts out more than enough power for your system but you check your rear battery and its dropped a few tenths of a volt over a week or a month or even a day you more than likely have a wiring issue. Real simple term to go by in fixing this is COMPLETE the circuit and ground back up front. 0 gauge from the front to the back you should use 0 from back to front.

 
Depends on the chassis, if it is a unibody there is no chassis front to back but rather sub frames. I have seen a few systems not charge properly from picking a bad ground. Takes more than a few seconds to see if the ground is good or bad. If for example you KNOW your alt puts out more than enough power for your system but you check your rear battery and its dropped a few tenths of a volt over a week or a month or even a day you more than likely have a wiring issue. Real simple term to go by in fixing this is COMPLETE the circuit and ground back up front. 0 gauge from the front to the back you should use 0 from back to front.
ok well i can always add that additional ground if i need 2 but i think i will be ok just because were the factory ground is on the primary battery.
 
You'll be fine with the short run of ground. You really don't want to rely on a long a$$ ground all the way from the front to the back. It won't hurt to do both, but as long as the short run is a proper ground. You shouldn't have to worry.

 
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blackga

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