Tiara boats for decades had twin engines starting off a single bank. They did add a twist to it, one engine alt fed the house bank directly. They did have a manual house/start cross tie in case you lose an alt or similar problem.
It made it a bit tricky to troubleshoot as many operators and techs did not understand the system.
One caveat: With one engine running, starting the second can really spike the amp output of the running engine alternator.
I kinda like the "use the house bank" for starting design. Keep gennie batt sep and if you poop the house bank so far you can't start mains, just run the gen and chgr/inverter a bit.
Many boats already start both engines off one bank as many operators leave the manual crosstie closed.
Simple is better!!! Been on way too many boats where over the years folks have added batts, inverters, switches, cables, etc... And no schematics drawn. Try to troubleshoot one of those and it gets confusing fast.
Doug
A certainly appreciate being placed in the same class as Ski but I will never come close to his knowledge and experience. I'm willing to share as he does but that's as far as it goes!
I debated about putting my gen set back on my 3 bank shore charger when I combined the house. I was unsure of how good an idea it was to have a fairly large and a very small batty bank on a multi bank charger. Is it a good idea to continue applying charging V & A to a small quickly charged batty... especially an AGM?
I have read some that said its not a good idea and I have the ability to top off the gen batty periodically and parallel if needed - which I have never had to use in 8 yrs.
AGMs have very low self discharge and should hold charge over an extended time.
At least thats my rationale why I did what I did. There are lots of ways of doing this sort of thing and I don't think any one right or wrong.
I can get the 32 volt alternator to charge a 32 volt battery that is used for a 32 volt starter. Why a 32 volt house system?Lets see....... (from memory )
2- 32V banks consisting of 4 8VDC batteries the size of Ohio in series each. 1 pure start bank, one start/house bank. Two 32V alternators, one on each engine.
1-12VDC start battery for the generator. Charges itself, not used for anything else.
1-12VDC electronics battery with 120VAC charger.
2-12 DC in series for the 24V bow thruster with 120VAC charger.
The astute reader will note that the only batteries getting charged with engines running are the 32V banks. So if I want to make sure my electronics stay alive and my bow thruster is there for me on the other end I have to run the generator underway. I also don't have an inverter and the fridge is 120VAC.
So, there are some modifications coming.
We have one for each engine and then the parallel to use house bank if an issue arises with the start batts. IMHO, depending on where/how you cruise, you can never have too much redundancy.All,
Just thinking about having a dedicated battery for each engine or a shared one for both.
As first, seems like separate make more sense, however, one is simpler.
In either case, you still have the house for a backup. Also, if one wanted more redundancy, use two batteries in parallel for either engine. And you could also hook them to the thrusters for thruster power.
Thoughts?
Many old larger boats were built with the whole DC system 32v. Large engines could not be reliably started with 12v starters, and at the time 32v was more popular than 24v.
Then over time larger engines started being built with 24v start as 24 is easier than 32v, just need two 12v batts in series. 8V batts used in series for 32v are big and expensive and not super easy to find.
Owners of these big old boats faced a dilemma. 32v accessories are hard to find and expensive. New electronics are almost all 12v.
So many of these boats kept 32v for starting, and started adding a bit of 12v stuff, usually piecemeal.
Really a pain in the but dealing with these. You could go 24v, but it does not help much as you still need 12v. Going with a series/parallel starting solenoid switch is one way, but those are not terribly reliable.
And wire size for 32v can be sized much smaller than 12v wire doing the same job.
Add a 24v thruster and now you have it: 12, 24, 32, 120, 240v all on the same boat!!!
I can get the 32 volt alternator to charge a 32 volt battery that is used for a 32 volt starter. Why a 32 volt house system?
Then it appears that the 32 V Alternators are feeding power to an inverter to feed 120VAC chargers.
You said by memory, if accurate seems like a odd setup to have 12, 24 & 32 volt systems.
How about no start batteries? I, and plenty of others, use our house bank to start the engines. So, sure, ypu have have starting batteries for redundancy but aall they do is add wiring, switches, and complexity. And, what if one of those switches go bad. No start?