Battery relocation
#1
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Battery relocation
Hey all,
I'm looking at relocating my battery to the rear of the car using an Odyssey pc680 and some 50mm welding cable RATED TO 365amps.
Is that the right size cable?
When I place a circuit breaker or fuse in line by the battery, how many amps do I want it to be?
Thanks,
I'm looking at relocating my battery to the rear of the car using an Odyssey pc680 and some 50mm welding cable RATED TO 365amps.
Is that the right size cable?
When I place a circuit breaker or fuse in line by the battery, how many amps do I want it to be?
Thanks,
#2
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Get the thickest cables you can. I advise both positive AND negative cables, but some folk go for earthing through the body.
As for fuses, be careful, you cannot fuse the cable between battery and starter, modern starters can pull 500 Amps for first cranking, which would blow any fuse. Modern cars have the main fuse/circuit breaker in the feed to the alternator and car electrics, AFTER the starter cable has branched off.
As for fuses, be careful, you cannot fuse the cable between battery and starter, modern starters can pull 500 Amps for first cranking, which would blow any fuse. Modern cars have the main fuse/circuit breaker in the feed to the alternator and car electrics, AFTER the starter cable has branched off.
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Ive seen 0 gauge used in most set ups that I've found online, some even use smaller.
50mm welding cable seems to be the same cross section as 0gauge but it is rated for more amps.
My plan was to ground the battery to the body.
run the live to a bus bar in the engine bay and then branch off to where it needs to go.
Would you say the ground from the engine is best run back to the battery rather then to the body?
50mm welding cable seems to be the same cross section as 0gauge but it is rated for more amps.
My plan was to ground the battery to the body.
run the live to a bus bar in the engine bay and then branch off to where it needs to go.
Would you say the ground from the engine is best run back to the battery rather then to the body?
Last edited by LoganS; 27 April 2017 at 07:28 PM.
#5
Get the thickest cables you can. I advise both positive AND negative cables, but some folk go for earthing through the body.
As for fuses, be careful, you cannot fuse the cable between battery and starter, modern starters can pull 500 Amps for first cranking, which would blow any fuse. Modern cars have the main fuse/circuit breaker in the feed to the alternator and car electrics, AFTER the starter cable has branched off.
As for fuses, be careful, you cannot fuse the cable between battery and starter, modern starters can pull 500 Amps for first cranking, which would blow any fuse. Modern cars have the main fuse/circuit breaker in the feed to the alternator and car electrics, AFTER the starter cable has branched off.
I've done several battery to boot conversions (albeit not on a Subaru) and have never blown a 150 amp fuse... even while trying to get one of them started after a conversion to Megasquirt.
Last edited by agw_01; 27 April 2017 at 10:39 PM.
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Ok cool, there's one at the moment which goes from somewhere near the starter to the battery. So I would ground this one to the body.
Last edited by LoganS; 27 April 2017 at 11:36 PM.
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agw_01 I've read a few threads where 150 amps have been ample (hehe) I probably will put one inline just as a safe guard. Worst case is it blows and I put something a little bigger in.
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#8
Each to their own and all that.
I'm sure a well routed cable, protected in some conduit would be ok but given that a cable will be subject to vibrations and movement over time, it's a no-brainer to not have an extra layer of protection.
I've seen what can happen when un-fused electrical connections go wrong, and the results aren't pretty!
I'm sure a well routed cable, protected in some conduit would be ok but given that a cable will be subject to vibrations and movement over time, it's a no-brainer to not have an extra layer of protection.
I've seen what can happen when un-fused electrical connections go wrong, and the results aren't pretty!