pab
Member Since: 28 Aug 2012
Location: Now in Mid-Wales
Posts: 2007
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I wouldn't describe these as electrical items in the usual sense, and would connect them directly to the battery - the jump kit particularly as that's potentially going to be carrying some very high currents.
For anything else things can get complicated as you need to take account of earthing, electrical interference, etc. Radio equipment (thinking transceivers rather than ICE), for example, is usually connected directly to the battery (or even to a separate dedicated battery with its own charging circuit) to avoid interference.
Without reading it I'm not sure what the Aussie site is on about - possibly something to do with potential differences if something connected directly to the battery is also separately earthed to a part of the car which, due to bad earthing, is at a slightly different potential?
Why do you need the jump kit, by the way? It's not something I'd expect to need very often, and there are warnings in the handbook regarding jump starting to do with electrical spikes and the electronics. Cables with suppressors are recommended, but jump starting is best avoided if possible (which it's not always, of course).
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14th Oct 2013 3:39 pm |
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