
PS This vehicle was made for import to Canada & I found a oil heater 110volt wire & plug while under the hood, so I guess we could travel to Alaska or the East Coast.

halfdome, Danny wrote:
Rich, In the left top corner is a bolt with what appears to be a red battery connection but I couldn't get my test light to come on with the engine on or off. On the top right corner there is a bolt without a nut like you mentioned and it too won't light up. Danny
Danny, I responded on Blazerowners.com but from your picture, the Stud 2 I was talking about appears to be the brass colored one in the upper right corner of the picture you've posted.
halfdome, Danny wrote: If someone was to steal it the incompatible wiring may alert law enforcement. Danny
GeorgeTelford wrote:Hi Danny
Many people mistakenly believe that an alternator is a good battery charger, this is not true, at best it can only charge to around 65%, this maybe OK if all you use is a light.. I have seen that you have a Fan, Tv and lights, lets look at some numbers
Lets say you have A 100 ah battery, if its charged by the wire you have 65 Ah, less the 50% that you should not use leaves 15 Ah ( you can use more but you are killing the battery off )
If charged via a decent mains charger ( and not connected to alternator on the way ) you would have 50 Ah thats 3.33 times more power to play with.
I originally discovered this by accident, In my old campervan I used to hook up at home and charge the batteries and while out camping for weekends never ran out of power (even for long weekends fri to mon night)
Eventually I decided to add a charge wire, first weekend out ran out of power on the second day, the same the next weeekend (I was still fully charging the batteries on hook up at home first) anyway this bothered me so I removed the charge wire, next weekend no problem, to cut a long story short having checked it out thoroughly the above is true
GeorgeTelford wrote:Hi Danny
I hear you on the cost and usability issue, but you could try this, why not charge fully via battery tender (is that a staged charger?) then do not use the alternator wire until after you have run the battery down, that way at least you get to use the charge you have put in and then use the minimal charging when you have to (best of both worlds then)
BTW beware of putting a switch in the battery box, while charging gas is created, switches create sparks when being disconnected, you could end up with an exploding battery, this is the same reason that fuses should not be in the battery box either.
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