darksheep85
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This is something I've been thinking about for a while and the Internet doesn't seem to have an answer. So I'm hoping someone here might be able to shine some light on the subject.
2x12v batteries in series gives us our 24v (doubles the voltage, amps stay the same)
2x12v batteries in parallel would give 12v (voltage stays the same, but doubles the amps)
IS IT POSSIBLE to connect 2 batteries in series AND parallel to give 24v and double the amps?
I know this is done with large battery banks such as electric forklifts. But I can't find any information as to whether you can do this with just 2 batteries.
My other point for asking this question is in theory, you could have 24v for the starting/charging system. Also, you could tap the parallel connections to get 12v from both batteries equally, preventing unequal charges.
Does this sound like it could work, or am I barking up the wrong tree? Is there some principle of battery physics that says you need more than 2 batteries for a series/parallel configuration?
Let's find out who the electrical engineers are!
2x12v batteries in series gives us our 24v (doubles the voltage, amps stay the same)
2x12v batteries in parallel would give 12v (voltage stays the same, but doubles the amps)
IS IT POSSIBLE to connect 2 batteries in series AND parallel to give 24v and double the amps?
I know this is done with large battery banks such as electric forklifts. But I can't find any information as to whether you can do this with just 2 batteries.
My other point for asking this question is in theory, you could have 24v for the starting/charging system. Also, you could tap the parallel connections to get 12v from both batteries equally, preventing unequal charges.
Does this sound like it could work, or am I barking up the wrong tree? Is there some principle of battery physics that says you need more than 2 batteries for a series/parallel configuration?
Let's find out who the electrical engineers are!