Always having your engine ready to go
Informative and lively thread!
I would like to add one thought not mentioned in this thread of charging and switching. ...it may not be prudent to switch your starting battery off. Many times you may need to quickly start the motor to get out of situation. No time to leave the helm and go down below to switch the starting battery on to start the engine.
Shell,
If you investigate the wiring diagrams and the discussion above, you will see that in either case of the "preferred" systems I mentioned and that MS discussed, at NO TIME was the engine not able to start. This is because in my reply #27, in Item 2, scenario (a) Separate Switching: the reserve bank is ALWAYS connected to the starter; and in (b) Still Using the 1-2-B Switch: the house bank is ALWAYS connected, so the engine is ALWAYS ready to go. If you use (b), leave it on the house bank position all the time unless you kill your house bank and need the backup bank (which is why we keep calling it that). Don't switch to the reserve bank to start your engine (except for a periodic check run to assure it's working fine).
The points we keep trying to make to people about this subject are:
1. Stop calling it a "start" bank; call it an emergency, reserve and/or backup bank, and USE it that way. The house bank is perfectly capable of starting your engine.
2. Wire it either of the two ways described and linked to real life wiring diagrams (unless you have a Beneteau!

).
3. Get you alternator output OFF the 1-2-B switch -- since the output then always has a load, you can even turn the switch off if you want with no fear of fried diodes. Your brother-in-law will never kill your alternator ever again!
4. Work hard to trace your wiring and understand how, first, it may be wired either from the factory (usually horrible) or the PO; and, second, make whatever changes you deem acceptable to YOU and how YOU want to run your boat and draw a wiring diagram of THAT, so both you and the next owner can understand it.
The importance of a reliable electrical system cannot be understated. After years of neglect, due to questionable factory installations (alternator output to 1-2-B switches, for instance) and the growth of electrically hungry boat systems (autopilots, chart plotters, GPS, radios, computers, electrical appliances like microwaves, coffee makers, etc.), we ALL depend more and more on our electrical systems' integrity.
It becomes, now, a SAFETY issue, rather than mere convenience.
Because of that, it behooves us all to spend a little more time learning this stuff, and putting the days of "Electrical?? I just don't understand that stuff; I thought you just turned the key and off ya go" behind us.
With these forums, the sharing nature of many of us to help you understand, and the incredible amount of information that's out there, and a little "quality time" "under the hood" it's not really that hard ONCE YOU DRAW A WIRING DIAGRAM.
Many of us started out with smaller boats, with simpler systems. When we got our Big Boat with its more complicated systems, the first thing I bought was Calder's Boatowner's Manual. I studied it, and didn't get it all right away, it took some time. But I personally traced and drew the wiring on my boat. I found out how wrong the POs wiring diagram was, and where it was incorrect. I learned how it was supposed to work, and over the course of the past ten years have discussed this here and on our C34 Message Board. I've learned a lot from many others who have chimed in, and have developed the "preferred" systems (again, Beneteaus notwithstanding

) from websites, equipment manuals, The West Marine Advisors, Ample Power, and others. I didn't make this stuff up, but MS and Bill Roosa and Don and many others have contributed to my, and I hope, your understanding by simplifying as much as we could and sharing our knowledge with you all.
I once had a friend who, when my engine started right away, said: "Wow, that's great, how do you manage to do that? Mine doesn't always start!" That's when I realized the time I spent learning this stuff was well worth every moment. We boat safe, we boat smart and we can relax much more knowing how it works, why it works and troubleshoot any glitches which, because it's a boat, will invariably occur.
Fair Winds, and Happy Electrons,
Stu