I've got a sailboat that has both 12v and 24v systems. Nearly all systems are 12v. The 24v battery bank is used to power my anchor windlass and my inverter.
Currently I have two battery chargers and two alternators to charge each of the systems. I'm about to repower and I'd like to go with just a 12v alternator. I'm looking for a custom switch that will allow me to treat my 24v bank as two 12v banks for charging, then put them in series when I need the anchor windlass or inverter.
I understand that some truck manufacturers have done this to crank a 24v starter on a truck that otherwise runs off 12v. The switch is solenoid-driven and is called a series/parallel switch. But that's all I know about it. Since I'd need 24v for minutes or hours at a time the solenoid switch sounds like a bad idea, but maybe a manual equivalent exists.
I drew myself a diagram and it seems like I would need two switches (NC) for +12, one switch (NC) to connect the middle ground, and two more switches (NO) to put the batteries in series and hook up the 24v load. All would need to be capable of high amperage and they would need to be break-before-make to prevent dangerous high amperage shorts and arcing.
Has anyone ever seen such a switch?
Currently I have two battery chargers and two alternators to charge each of the systems. I'm about to repower and I'd like to go with just a 12v alternator. I'm looking for a custom switch that will allow me to treat my 24v bank as two 12v banks for charging, then put them in series when I need the anchor windlass or inverter.
I understand that some truck manufacturers have done this to crank a 24v starter on a truck that otherwise runs off 12v. The switch is solenoid-driven and is called a series/parallel switch. But that's all I know about it. Since I'd need 24v for minutes or hours at a time the solenoid switch sounds like a bad idea, but maybe a manual equivalent exists.
I drew myself a diagram and it seems like I would need two switches (NC) for +12, one switch (NC) to connect the middle ground, and two more switches (NO) to put the batteries in series and hook up the 24v load. All would need to be capable of high amperage and they would need to be break-before-make to prevent dangerous high amperage shorts and arcing.
Has anyone ever seen such a switch?