I recently purchased a "new to me" boat. It has recently had new battery switches installed that are different than what I am used to. I bought my first boat in 1962 and have always been familiar with the... #1, #2, Both...configuration of the switches. This boat has twin engines and the one switch is called a "Dual Circuit Plus". It has an "ON" position and a "Combiner" position. I get the part about keeping the two charging circuits separate and the Combiner position in case a battery gets too low to crank the engine, you can boost it with the other battery. What I don't get is If I have the Dual circuit switch in the off position, I still get power to everything if I turn the other switch to #1 or #2. I have plans to remove the switches and chase down where everything is going but I need to make sure I understand what should be happening in the different positions so it operates as it should. Seems kinda odd that after a half century of standard Boston switches doing their job perfectly, somebody decided it needed changing. It's the shits to get old. Stuff starts outpacing a guy.
I would appreciate an explanation if someone has a handle on this and a simple diagram would be Aces. I have a single group 27 on each circuit.
I would appreciate an explanation if someone has a handle on this and a simple diagram would be Aces. I have a single group 27 on each circuit.