Hi Owners...
I'm adding an LFP battery bank to my First 36.7, and it will replace a FLA battery. Because the start battery will be AGM I want to isolate the batteries.
I learned that on this boat, there is a single positive bus. There are three battery switches, one black for the common negative ground and two red ones, one for each of two batteries. The battery switches are actually connected together, so turning either battery on causes that battery to do everything (house and engine start). It's more like a BATT1, BATT2, BOTH switch.
I separated the switches by removing the jumper and discovered that, to start the engine, I now have to have both switches on. If either switch is on, the engine panel is completely dead. Pressing the start button does nothing. I never even hear the solenoid.
After I start the engine I do see alternator voltage on just one battery, which is good.
So my question is, how is the engine panel control wired and what do I have to do so that it can be powered from the start battery alone?
I'm adding an LFP battery bank to my First 36.7, and it will replace a FLA battery. Because the start battery will be AGM I want to isolate the batteries.
I learned that on this boat, there is a single positive bus. There are three battery switches, one black for the common negative ground and two red ones, one for each of two batteries. The battery switches are actually connected together, so turning either battery on causes that battery to do everything (house and engine start). It's more like a BATT1, BATT2, BOTH switch.
I separated the switches by removing the jumper and discovered that, to start the engine, I now have to have both switches on. If either switch is on, the engine panel is completely dead. Pressing the start button does nothing. I never even hear the solenoid.
After I start the engine I do see alternator voltage on just one battery, which is good.
So my question is, how is the engine panel control wired and what do I have to do so that it can be powered from the start battery alone?