dmcruising wrote:i'm looking at doing acebryans system and was also told that if needed i could use the 2nd battery to start the car by a switch. How would i set this up and what i needed. i already have the solenoid, battery and cable (just trying to find a surf airbox to do the 2nd battery in the engine bay ln106 hilux).
I haven't used the basic solenoid setup myself, because I don't think it does what a dual battery setup needs to do - ie automatically charging the primary battery fully before charging the secondary battery. There are some situations where you can end up with two flat batteries, which I think defeats the purpose of having dual batteries. I would describe it as a step up from just joining the two batteries together permanently, but not a true dual battery system. I am not shooting anyone down though, I think the basic set-up has some value as a cheap option.
But anyway, if you did want to do what you've described, it's pretty simple. The wire that Acebryan says you should hook up to "ACC" power can also be connected by a switch to battery power. Then when you flick this switch, you trip the solenoid and your two batteries are connected no matter what.
Will this be enough to start your car through? Maybe; normally a two-battery setup uses reasonably heavy, but not incredibly heavy, cable between the two batteries. It's not normally going to be cable that's as heavy as your starter motor cable. It's also a lot longer than your starter motor cable. But it would probably work for an emergency and I would install a switch like that if I were using that system. If your dual-battery cable is as good as a jumper lead then it should do it.
Two things though.
Firstly, if I ever needed to start from my aux battery, I would just use a set of jumper leads across the two batteries, not the dual battery connection. For me this keeps things a bit simpler, and it's crazy not to carry jumper leads in any car imho anyway.
Secondly, I would not install a simple on-off switch for the emergency start situation. I would install a two-position switch as follows:
Terminal 1: Accessories power
Terminal 2: -> to the solenoid
Terminal 3: "always on" battery power
This means that you can switch between the batteries being connected all the time, or only when you have the key turned to Accessories or Ign. This way you won't be sending power back to your accessories from the aux battery when you desperately need all the power to start the car.
Or you could have a three-position switch that gives you a manual "off" position for the solenoid.
Normally you will leave it in the "accessories" position if you want it to work that way. But you can use the "on" position for starting, and the "off" position if your aux battery is very flat, and you don't think you'll be driving for long enough to charge both batteries.
Cheers,
Jason
This is not legal advice.