Aurelian
New Member
- Joined
- Aug 23, 2024
- Messages
- 12
- Country Flag
Hey all,
I currently have an auxiliary battery running my fridge. I plan to add solar to the auxiliary now to charge this battery while not driving, and in future I will likely want to add an inverter.
I have a decent-ish understanding of automotive electrical and know how each individual thing works, but when combining them all into a larger system I have a few gaps when it comes to the wiring position of things.
When you look at a typical wiring diagram it's all very neat, with all power sources going directly into the battery, and all load being taken directly from the battery.
This doesn't always fit with reality though, of course.
My question is, what happens if the order of these things along the line is changed. What if the solar input connects inline between the inverter and battery, rather than directly to the battery.
What if devices like a fridge or inverter sit between the battery and solar panels.
Like so.
The one thing I'm not sure about is the solar pushing power into the system at different points along the line, before or after load devices pulling power out of it.
In diagram B specifically, the direction of energy flowing "looks" like power from the solar regulator is being driven into the Inverter before the battery, rather than the inverter only pulling from the battery itself.
Does this matter? Or is the whole system effectively the same 'pool' that is just being filled and emptied, regardless of where in the line things sit? And it doesn't matter in what particular things sit as long as they're all ultimately connected to positive and negative (with appropriate gauge wire, fuses, etc. obviously).
Could you, for example, have a single paired-cable coming from the battery with a 3-way split at the end with 3 Anderson plugs, and have your fridge, inverter, and solar all connected at the same end , drawing and feeding power through the single cable to the battery simultaneously. Like this...
Thanks all.
I currently have an auxiliary battery running my fridge. I plan to add solar to the auxiliary now to charge this battery while not driving, and in future I will likely want to add an inverter.
I have a decent-ish understanding of automotive electrical and know how each individual thing works, but when combining them all into a larger system I have a few gaps when it comes to the wiring position of things.
When you look at a typical wiring diagram it's all very neat, with all power sources going directly into the battery, and all load being taken directly from the battery.
This doesn't always fit with reality though, of course.
My question is, what happens if the order of these things along the line is changed. What if the solar input connects inline between the inverter and battery, rather than directly to the battery.
What if devices like a fridge or inverter sit between the battery and solar panels.
Like so.
The one thing I'm not sure about is the solar pushing power into the system at different points along the line, before or after load devices pulling power out of it.
In diagram B specifically, the direction of energy flowing "looks" like power from the solar regulator is being driven into the Inverter before the battery, rather than the inverter only pulling from the battery itself.
Does this matter? Or is the whole system effectively the same 'pool' that is just being filled and emptied, regardless of where in the line things sit? And it doesn't matter in what particular things sit as long as they're all ultimately connected to positive and negative (with appropriate gauge wire, fuses, etc. obviously).
Could you, for example, have a single paired-cable coming from the battery with a 3-way split at the end with 3 Anderson plugs, and have your fridge, inverter, and solar all connected at the same end , drawing and feeding power through the single cable to the battery simultaneously. Like this...
Thanks all.
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