Just installed a system on a boat with three large (300HP each) outboards. Each engine has its own AGM start battery. These three batteries can be connected in parallel when desired, via dedicated emergency parallel switches. Each AGM battery also serves other needs (bow thruster, windlass, etc.)
We installed three non-isolated DC-DC chargers (one for each start battery) with charger outputs connected to a bus bar that then connects to new house lithium. Chargers are configured to sense engine start. Everything seems to work and charge as desired.
Question:
Are the DC-DC chargers inadvertently connecting the three AGMs in parallel (through their connected ‘outputs’?). I didn’t think they would, but when checking the ‘emergency parallel’ switches for function, I see continuity (via multimeter) from AGM battery to AGM battery ‘through’ the chargers. Do I need to install diodes, or perhaps Battery Protects for each charger to prevent current flowing from one AGM to the other through the chargers? I thought the chargers would already do this (so that current would not flow from lithium house bank back to start batteries), but the fact that I see continuity surprised me. I would like to keep the AGMs truly independent ‘normally’, for redundancy (i.e., so if one battery goes bad, it doesn’t drag down the others).