smckean (Tosca)
New member
I've been analyzing the AC and DC configurations on my boat because I'm pretty sure I have some wiring errors (mostly surrounding how the batteries are configured and charged). Yesterday, I did perhaps a foolish thing. Can anyone explain it?
While underway with both the starter and house battery switches on, and my eye on voltage read-outs for both battery banks, I got the bright idea (not!) to try an experiment. I wanted to test whether the installed ACR/VSR unit combined the batteries regardless of the state of charge of either battery. Somehow I convinced myself that I would learn something if I switched off the start battery. Surprise!! As soon as I set the starter switch to "off", the engine instantly quit. It dawned on me that I may have just killed my alternator in the OB since I've heard that, on inboard engines, if you disconnect the starter battery, even for a fraction of a second, you permanently destroy your alternator. Thankfully, I turned the starter battery switch to "on", re-started the engine, and voila the alternator was fine and supplied normal charging voltage to all the appropriate places.
So my question to this august group is: was I just lucky; or do OBs have some sort of protection system that detects this situation and cuts the engine before the alternator blows; or is it false that one can blow an alternator so easily? Also, unless the 2nd option is true (which would explain it), why did my engine quit when I switched off the start battery?
P.S. Replacing an alternator on a standard engine isn't normally very hard or expensive, but I assume it could be very expensive on an OB. Anyone know?
While underway with both the starter and house battery switches on, and my eye on voltage read-outs for both battery banks, I got the bright idea (not!) to try an experiment. I wanted to test whether the installed ACR/VSR unit combined the batteries regardless of the state of charge of either battery. Somehow I convinced myself that I would learn something if I switched off the start battery. Surprise!! As soon as I set the starter switch to "off", the engine instantly quit. It dawned on me that I may have just killed my alternator in the OB since I've heard that, on inboard engines, if you disconnect the starter battery, even for a fraction of a second, you permanently destroy your alternator. Thankfully, I turned the starter battery switch to "on", re-started the engine, and voila the alternator was fine and supplied normal charging voltage to all the appropriate places.
So my question to this august group is: was I just lucky; or do OBs have some sort of protection system that detects this situation and cuts the engine before the alternator blows; or is it false that one can blow an alternator so easily? Also, unless the 2nd option is true (which would explain it), why did my engine quit when I switched off the start battery?
P.S. Replacing an alternator on a standard engine isn't normally very hard or expensive, but I assume it could be very expensive on an OB. Anyone know?