
Offline
So you're not going to the next European Healey Meet?
The Norway meet? Doesn't include winter, does it?
No, but some of us plan on going to Death Valley next year.
So you're not going to the next European Healey Meet?
Hi Steve,
I believe it is even simpler then you may understand. Since the starter and its solenoid are extending from the battery as a singlet separate circuit, its components and the battery cable are only active for a short period and thereby pose a much reduced risk of causing a problem or having a disabling short circuit. This risk is further diminished by using a Ford Remote solenoid located near the battery to fully disengage this circuit from the battery when not activated during engine starting.
The second cabin routed battery connection would be also connected to the battery terminal and routed directly to the B terminal on the voltage regulator. This connection would consist of an appropriately sized cable (10 Gauge or better) and could be protected by a 20-40 Amp fuse. Following normal operations, alternator/generator charging power as well as operating power demands would be satisfied through this battery path.
All in all, I believe a much safer arrangement baring unanticipated issues.
Ray(64BJ8P1)
Important: by making such radical changes, we may be in fact decreasing the reliability of a known-reliable system which has worked well for generations.
-True: Steve
Increasing the number of parts in a system tends to reduce its reliability.
What is easy to do here in order to prevent damage to the starter cable, is to armor it with metal conduit against scrapes. If correctly executed, this adds no potential for failure into an
False: Steve
Enclosing the cable in a metal conduit alters its thermal characteristics which causes its overall resistance to increase.
From a Electrical / mechanical standpoint:
The conduit must be reliably insulated from the cars chassis over its total length which is difficult to achieve and if not accomplished places chassis ground in the immediate close proximity of the cable potentially enhancing its susceptibility to failure'
Sufficient to say your garage which is wooden uses a relatively large- conduit-- No BX which places the wire in close contact with the conduit. which may not protect your garage from an electrical short in the wire .
Steve:
All wire / cable is current rated as a single wire in free space SO :
Even when we bundle wire into a harness those wires can't dissipate heat like they were rated to do for a given current and they run at higher temps and lower current which like I
said will cause their resistance to increase per unit length., under fault conditions simply reduces the insulations dielectric strength and a total failure which is enjoined by the close fitting conduit.
Keoke - I think you're saying conduit large enough to be rated for that cable would be too large to be practic
No Steve:
That is not what I meant .
.
I meant do not put metal conduit over wiring used in DC circuits on Cars, the enhanced susceptibility for failure falls outside of good electrical engineering design.