- Location
- Rainy side of Washington
as an EE I would disagree with this.Diodes work off resistance. Remember the old tubes in radios and TVs? They were full of diodes. Once they heat up, they limit the current and then the amount of heat that is released. If he is trying to run something off it, which is what I take him to say, and if his symptoms are accurate, then it is doing what it is supposed to do and he is exceeding the design of it. Most isolators are supposed to isolate a battery from the charging circuit so that you control the battery voltage for each battery. If he is only getting 30A out of it it will not be enough to run the vehicle, which is why it is stalling.
As stated above, I am making some assumptions about how he is running it. That is why I asked for a detailed explanation of how it is wired and what type of batteries etc.
tubes were more like a MOSFET than a diode - just one that happens to have a heater / light bulb built into it. Many specialized ones for power RF transmission and demodulation have more than one grid, up to 7 in the case of some heptagrid converter tubes.
Diodes do not work off resistance, they allow current to flow in only one direction and have a forward voltage directly related to the junction temperature, a physical constant (whose value depends on the material used to create the diode, germanium, silicon, gallium arsenide, indium gallium aluminum phosphide, etc), and forward current, see Shockley's Diode Equation for more details.
However that is neither here nor there, since the regulator in a 2001 is controlled by the PCM, which uses as feedback the voltage it sees on its power lines (which come after the diode isolator in his setup) the regulator will be cranking up the field voltage on the alternator a bit to compensate for the minor forward voltage drop of the diode isolator, so the battery SHOULD be receiving full charging voltage and whatever current it requires. The way it does it with the vehicle off as well makes me think this is entirely unrelated to the isolator and is probably a corroded terminal or loose connection somewhere.
EDIT: also - if I am understanding it correctly the purpose of the isolator in this case is to separate the two batteries but charge them both via the alternator, i.e. discharging one battery fully will not affect the other.
Last edited: