Hi all,
I am just thinking about developing a circuit to charged a 12 Volt battery and the charging circuit will be porwered by a second battery
Hi all,
I am just thinking about developing a circuit to charged a 12 Volt battery and the charging circuit will be porwered by a second battery
Hello all, this is my maiden post here, I've truely enjoyed learning from this community. 7485.contentimage_1.png
This is a topic that continually seems to come up in the area of alternative energy a lot, for me anyway. A while back I was evaluating a three coil Bedini SSG motor, it had four independent batteries. Because the positive side of the source battery is connected to the negative of the charge battery(s) there is not a common. To handle this I used DPDT latching relays to move the batteries between their role as source and charge, this seemed to work quite well and kept things isolated.
Possibly this method of DPDT relays would work, latching to minimize power draw...?
Hello all, this is my maiden post here, I've truely enjoyed learning from this community. 7485.contentimage_1.png
This is a topic that continually seems to come up in the area of alternative energy a lot, for me anyway. A while back I was evaluating a three coil Bedini SSG motor, it had four independent batteries. Because the positive side of the source battery is connected to the negative of the charge battery(s) there is not a common. To handle this I used DPDT latching relays to move the batteries between their role as source and charge, this seemed to work quite well and kept things isolated.
Possibly this method of DPDT relays would work, latching to minimize power draw...?
Actually, with the two batteries that you described with a common point (one pos, one neg), that is a common point and a single, higher voltage charger can charge both batteries at the same time since they are in series. The open circuit charge voltage needs to be higher than the two battery voltages added together in this case. There's no need to use complex relay switching.