freecr
Member
- 45
- 1
- 8
- Location
- Rochester/MN
Hello all,
Its summer time so back to it…
I’m interested in switching to only having a 24 volt system. I know others have done this or have planned on doing this while others bought their trucks already this way so I know it’s doable. For the radio, trailer controller and a couple of 12v outlets I’ll use a 24/12 converter. I know I’ll need to convert the lighting to 24 volt but I was already planning on installing all LEDs anyway so no extra work there. I don’t know whether the gauges use 12 or 24v. Does anybody here know? I deleted the CTIS so no 12v needed there. I don’t think there’s any other 12v stuff on the truck but if there is please tell me. I have a M1079 and will have a 24 volt solar system for the shelter. Being able to charge everything via the engine if needed is appealing but way simpler on mono (24) voltage. I haven’t decided yet on one massive battery bank or two independent but selectable/combinable battery banks. Obvious advantages/disadvantages to each and why I haven’t decided yet. So anyway, back to the 24 volt question(s)…
If I don’t use (don’t connect) the 14v leg from the alternator, are the entire 100+ amps then at 28 volts? From what little information I’ve read it seems like the 14 volt leg is only as needed, ie demand based. Does this sound right? I hope so as this is just convenient and the cheapest route.
Or
Can I use a 28 volt (only) regulator instead of the 14/28 volt one currently attached to my alternator? These are common on eBay, as long as I find one that is rated high enough, of course. Do they all share common connections? I’m guessing that they do and the alternator puts out whatever it puts out and the regulator converts it to the correct voltage (if needed/demand based). Am I correct?
Hopefully I don’t need to buy an alternator.
Thanks for any help.
With any luck there will be a consensus.
Its summer time so back to it…
I’m interested in switching to only having a 24 volt system. I know others have done this or have planned on doing this while others bought their trucks already this way so I know it’s doable. For the radio, trailer controller and a couple of 12v outlets I’ll use a 24/12 converter. I know I’ll need to convert the lighting to 24 volt but I was already planning on installing all LEDs anyway so no extra work there. I don’t know whether the gauges use 12 or 24v. Does anybody here know? I deleted the CTIS so no 12v needed there. I don’t think there’s any other 12v stuff on the truck but if there is please tell me. I have a M1079 and will have a 24 volt solar system for the shelter. Being able to charge everything via the engine if needed is appealing but way simpler on mono (24) voltage. I haven’t decided yet on one massive battery bank or two independent but selectable/combinable battery banks. Obvious advantages/disadvantages to each and why I haven’t decided yet. So anyway, back to the 24 volt question(s)…
If I don’t use (don’t connect) the 14v leg from the alternator, are the entire 100+ amps then at 28 volts? From what little information I’ve read it seems like the 14 volt leg is only as needed, ie demand based. Does this sound right? I hope so as this is just convenient and the cheapest route.
Or
Can I use a 28 volt (only) regulator instead of the 14/28 volt one currently attached to my alternator? These are common on eBay, as long as I find one that is rated high enough, of course. Do they all share common connections? I’m guessing that they do and the alternator puts out whatever it puts out and the regulator converts it to the correct voltage (if needed/demand based). Am I correct?
Hopefully I don’t need to buy an alternator.
Thanks for any help.
With any luck there will be a consensus.