328DayTripper wrote:
I'm having trouble understanding the relationship between the so called "house battery" and the "engine batteries" and there seems to be alot of conflicting information regarding the use of each power source in this forum. I just bought my 1999 328 Vista a month ago by the way and I'm trying to work a couple bugs out. My boat is equipped with 3 group 27 batteries, guest switch, isolator and charger. After reading the owner manual and looking at the "Guest" battery switch panel, it stands to reason that the "house" battery is for emergency starting and powering purposes only, Not running all the DC components (without engines running) when the battery switch is in the "on" normal operating position. Rather, each engine start battery is used to run all DC (house) components, when the switch is in the "on" position. This theory makes sense because, in the event power is completely drained while at anchorage, the "emergency" or "house battery" can crank the engines once the engine batteries are depleted by switching to "Parallel or Ship Systems, Emergency start only".
In reading the other battery related threads, it seems everyone here has the relationship of house and engine batteries backward. I thought I must be wrong, but how can it be so, that the so called house battery powers all the boat electronics (without the engines running) then somehow the engines batteries mysteriously drain and the miracle house battery comes to the rescue after it's been powering everything else for 8 hours. Not possible. Right?
In my own situation, I think it's time to replace the engine batteries as I'm beginning to have trouble starting the engines, even after being plugged into shore power. My Port engine will not crank with battery in the ON position. It will only crank in parallel or ship system. The starboard engine is slow to crank but once it's running and I try to crank port, starboard will quit running and port just clicks once. I checked the battery cells and had to add fluid to both engine batteries. The port battery volt level has improved after adding water and recharging but is still not able to crank. The engine batteries are both deep cycle gp27 600cca and the house battery is dual purpose gp27 770cca. My assumption is that both engine batteries are beyond their useful life, the port being more depleted. I think they are just over 3 years old. Am I on target here with all of the above?
I'm thinking about replacing both engine batteries with gp31 deep cycle 800+ cca as I have no generator but I'm worried about cranking amps and the use of deep cycles for cranking. Would dual purpose be better or should I stick with the deep cycles for the engines? Why not just go with a regular cranking battery for the engines since the house battery supposedly powers all the electronics at anchor? Or is it accepted that the house battery is actually an emergency dual purpose battery? Additionally, I'm thinking about adding another deep cycle or two for more overnight power, hence the lack of generator... Any thoughts on this battery topic?
+1 on Decision's comments with the exception that I know of no way to parallel the starting batteries.
Each battery selector switch only controls 2 of the batteries, the respective engine and the ship systems battery (you called it 'house')
NORMAL OPERATION 'Battery switch ON'
Ship Systems Battery - All 12V systems not part of an engine, including bilge pumps, windlass
Engine Battery - All engine related tasks, including starting
This is where your switch should typically be.
ENGINE BATTERY DEAD, SHIP SYSTEMS GOOD 'Battery switch SHIP SYSTEMS'
Ship Systems Battery - All 12V systems not part of an engine, including bilge pumps, windlass + All engine related tasks, including starting
Engine Battery - Nothing
You can use this position if your engine battery is not starting the engine, and your ship systems battery is not run down. You might also use this if there is an issue with your engine battery, say an internal short.
EMERGENCY OPERATION 'Battery switch PARALLEL
Ship Systems Battery - All 12V systems not part of an engine, including bilge pumps, windlass + All engine related tasks, including starting
Engine Battery - All 12V systems not part of an engine, including bilge pumps, windlass + All engine related tasks, including starting
You can use this position if both your ship systems and engine battery function, but both are low on available current - this leaves the voltage at 12VDC but sums the current of both batteries. Careful with this one - if you leave it here and say go to the beach or anchor, you can drain both your engine and ship system batteries and have no way to start your engine.
In all cases the breaker labelled 'ship systems' on the battery switch panel allows 12VDC power to flow to all 12V systems that are not engine related, from where ever the selector switch says that power should come from. (OFF,ON and SHIP SYSTEMS - from ship systems battery / PARALLEL - from both engine and ship systems battery). Only the bilge pumps do not run through this breaker.