Question

Do I need a DC-DC charger or just a split charge relay?

by Camper Clive · 2 years ago 479 views 17 replies
Camper Clive
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Right, I'm planning to upgrade my solar setup on my boat and need to clarify something before I spend the money.

Currently got a basic split charge relay installed to top up my leisure batteries from the engine alternator. Works fine for that, but I'm adding a decent solar array (thinking 400W of rigid panels) with a MPPT controller to properly charge the batteries whilst I'm moored up.

Here's my question: do I actually need a DC-DC charger to manage charging from the alternator, or can I keep the split relay as-is?

I've read conflicting advice online. Some folk say a DC-DC charger like a Victron Orion is essential for modern alternators, whilst others reckon a relay is perfectly adequate if you're not drawing massive current.

My setup's fairly modest—two 200Ah LifePO4 batteries, 100A alternator. The solar will handle most daily charging, but the alternator charging is really just a backup when I'm motoring between moorings or get caught short.

Does a DC-DC charger offer real advantages in my scenario, or is it overkill? I'm also wondering if there's any benefit to voltage regulation with LiFePO4 batteries that I'm missing.

Should I upgrade whilst I've got the panels sorted, or test the relay system first and see how it performs?

Keen to hear what others are running on similar setups, particularly with lithium banks.

😂 👍 ❤️ Baz Mason, LDV Solar, Dodgy Bodger
Panel Steve
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Split charge relays are brilliant if you like the suspense, mate. Will it charge today? Will it charge tomorrow? Nobody knows until you're already three miles down the canal with a flat battery and a narrowboat full of angry relatives.

Right, proper answer: DC-DC chargers give you actual control. Voltage regulation, multi-stage charging, temperature compensation. A

Neil Thompson
Bay Tim
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That's the thing though — split relays are dead simple but they're voltage-sensing, so you're at the mercy of your alternator output. If you're running solar as well, you want better control over when and how your leisure batteries charge.

DC-DC charger (something like a Victron or Renogy) will actually regulate the charge properly and play nicely with your solar controller. You can set absorption voltages, manage priority between engine and panels, that sort of thing. On a boat especially, where you might be idle for days relying on solar, you don't want the relay just sitting there doing nothing because the engine hasn't run.

What's your current solar setup? If you've already got panels on the boat, honestly a DC-DC is the smarter move. The relay might work, but it's old-school thinking.

Bomber66
Cliff Gazer
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Depends what you're running tbh. If it's just keeping a fridge topped up, a relay's fine. But if you've got decent solar panels going in, you'll want proper DC-DC control.

The thing with relays — @BayTim's right — they're dumb devices. They'll disconnect at a set voltage, which means your leisure battery might not actually be full. With a Victron Orion or similar, you get actual charging profiles. The alternator can pump proper current in without the relay nuisance-disconnecting halfway through.

On my boat setup I went Orion-Tr and it was the best quid I spent. Summer cruising season, engine on for 20 mins and the leisure bank's genuinely charged, not just "close enough." Way less sulking about battery voltage at 3am when you've got a dodgy relay bouncing in and out.

If you're upgrading solar anyway, might as well do it proper. Relay's okay for very basic setups, but once you're layering in panels, it's limitations show pretty quick.

👍 😢 Harbour Kate, FETWizard, Willow Derek
Marine Gaz
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Fair points from the crew above. The real issue is control — a relay just dumps charge when alternator voltage hits a threshold, then stops dead. No finesse.

With a proper DC-DC (Victron or Renogy), you get actual charging profiles — bulk, absorption, float. Means your leisure batteries actually get properly charged instead of half-arsed topped up. They'll last longer too.

On a boat especially, where you're running decent kit (fridges, heating, electronics), you want that regulated charge curve. Split relay will leave you frustrated when it won't charge in low-light conditions or during gentle motoring.

Cost difference isn't massive these days either. A Victron Orion 24/12 or similar is worth every penny if you're upgrading your solar anyway — might as well do it proper.

What's your actual load like?

👍 Emma Jackson, Amy Thompson
Panel Julie
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1 year ago
#486

The lads have nailed the main points, but here's what swung it for me on my boat setup:

A split relay works fine until your alternator voltage fluctuates (which it will), and you'll end up undercharging your leisure batteries or overcharging them depending on engine load. You're basically hostage to whatever the alternator's doing.

A proper DC-DC charger like a Victron Orion or even a budget Renogy unit gives you programmable charging profiles. You can set absorption voltage, float voltage, all that. Makes a massive difference if you've got lithium or prismatic batteries that need specific charge curves.

The cost difference isn't huge these days — maybe £200-300 more — but the upside is you'll actually get proper charge cycles rather than random dumps of power.

If you're just running minimal kit and charging rarely, yeah, a relay's fine. But if you're living aboard or doing regular cruising with decent loads, a DC-DC charger pays for itself in battery longevity alone. Worth the upgrade in my opinion.

What batteries are you running now?

👍 Jo
Boat Paddy
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1 year ago
#546

Split charge relay's basically a voltage-triggered on/off switch — fine if your alternator's your only source, but the moment you've got solar in the mix it all goes to pot because they're fighting each other like a married couple on a caravan holiday.

DC-DC charger gives you actual management — Victron or Renogy units will prioritise your solar, regulate voltage properly, and stop your leisure batteries cooking themselves. On my garden office setup I went DC-DC straight away because I couldn't be bothered with the relay squabbling with my panels every time I ran the engine.

Real question: what's your solar capacity versus alternator output? If solar's under 500W and you're mostly engine-charging, relay limps along. Anything more serious and you want a proper charger managing the handoff. @MarineGazer's spot on about control being the crux.

👍 Forest Dweller
Brummie
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1 year ago
#656

Been down this road myself on the tiny house build, so let me add the practical angle.

The split relay will work, don't get me wrong — mine's been solid for three years. But here's what you'll bang your head against: once you add solar to the mix, that relay becomes a liability. It'll keep dumping charge into your leisure batteries even when they're full, which means your alternator's working overtime and your fuel consumption creeps up.

A DC-DC charger like the Victron Orion does the clever bit — it actively manages what's going in. Battery nearly full? It throttles back. Alternator struggling? It doesn't pull more than you've got. You get proper multi-source management rather than just an on/off switch.

Where it really matters is when you're mixing solar and alternator charging. The relay can't prioritise or balance between them. With a DC-DC, you set the parameters once and it handles it.

That said, if your alternator's genuinely your only source and you're not adding solar, the relay's fine. But given you're upgrading, you might as well do it properly

🤗 Heather Graham, Rodney25, WheresMeWires
Spud
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1 year ago
#698

On a narrowboat you're basically choosing between "it works until it doesn't" and "it actually works" — split relay will happily cook your leisure batteries if your alternator's throwing 15+ amps at them, whereas a DC-DC charger like a Victron Orion actually manages the charge curve properly.

The relay's also dumb as a brick about battery voltage, so if your engine's running hot it'll just keep ramming amps in. A Renogy or Fogstar DC-DC will taper intelligently and won't fry your kit when you're offline for weeks.

Cost difference is what, £150-250? Might as well do it right the first time rather than replacing leisure batteries next winter.

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RetiredChef
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1 year ago
#733

You lot are dancing around the real issue — a split relay just watches the voltage like a hawk eyeing chips, whereas a DC-DC charger actually manages the charge profile. On my narrowboat, the relay would hammer my leisure batteries with whatever the engine threw at them, then cut out when it couldn't keep up. Swapped to a Victron Orion and suddenly the leisure bank's actually lasting longer than a British summer.

Solar on top of that? Forget it — your controller and alternator will have a disagreement about who's in charge. A proper DC-DC like the Orion or Renogy handles both inputs sensibly, isolates the starter battery (crucial), and charges at the right voltage ramps. Cost more upfront but your batteries won't age in dog years.

TL;DR — relay's the budget option that feels clever until winter, DC-DC charger is the one that actually works.

😂 🤗 😢 Willow Derek, Heath Liz, Valley Child, Tor Child
NotAnElectrician
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1 year ago
#886

Looking at your setup — what size leisure battery bank are you running? That's the key bit @Brummie and @Spud are hinting at.

The practical issue I ran into: a split relay just connects when alternator voltage hits ~13.6V, then disconnects at ~12.8V or so. Fine for topping up, but it doesn't manage the charge. If your leisure batteries are over 200Ah, you'll get slow, inefficient charging and the relay cycling constantly.

A DC-DC charger (I'm using a Victron Orion on mine) actually regulates the charge profile — bulk, absorption, float phases. Means faster charge times, less stress on the batteries, and it handles voltage drops from long cable runs properly.

Split relay costs £40-60. DC-DC charger is £300+. But if you're upgrading your solar anyway, investing in a proper charger now saves replacing it later when you realise the relay's bottlenecking everything.

What's your current leisure battery capacity? That'll tell you if you can get away with the relay or if you'd benefit from the

❤️ Camper Tel
CE_Builds
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#1160

Split relay's fine if your alternator voltage is stable and you're not hammering the bank hard. Problem is most van/boat alternators aren't designed for it — they'll just sit there pumping 14.4v regardless of what the leisure battery actually needs.

DC-DC charger (Victron or Fogstar if budget's tight) actively manages the charge profile. Temperature compensation, multi-stage charging, actually stops overcharging. On a boat especially, where you're sat for days then blasting the engine, it makes a real difference to battery longevity.

What's your battery capacity and what alternator you running? If it's a massive leisure bank and a standard automotive alternator, split relay will leave you with a half-charged battery and a cooked alternator eventually. If you're only trickling a small bank and rarely use the engine, relay might limp along.

Solar alone won't save you here — alternator's the real issue. Worth the £200-300 for a decent DC-DC just to not have to think about it.

👍 Wayne Wright, Camper Tel, PV_Fan
Daily Solar
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1 year ago
#1173

The friction between relay and DC-DC comes down to voltage regulation and load handling, which @RetiredChef's alluding to.

A split relay is essentially dumb—it just switches at a threshold (typically 13.2V). Fine if your alternator sits at a steady 14.4V, but most engines produce wildly variable output depending on RPM and load. You'll get slow, inconsistent charging.

A DC-DC charger (Victron's Orion or a Renogy equivalent) actively regulates that incoming voltage, then applies a proper charging profile to your leisure bank—bulk, absorption, float. Crucially, it'll charge faster and keep your batteries healthier over time.

Where it matters most: if you're running significant solar alongside engine charging, you absolutely want a DC-DC. Your MPPT and alternator will fight otherwise, both trying to control the same battery voltage. The DC-DC isolates that conflict.

For a boat, I'd lean DC-DC. Engine alternators are noisy on voltage, and leisure batteries deserve better than voltage-sensing chaos. The extra £300–400 pays itself back in longevity and usable capacity within a couple of years.

What's your leisure bank size and typical charge current from the engine?

Vito Wanderer
BodgeItAndScarper
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1 year ago
#1248

The relay vs DC-DC question always comes down to your alternator output and how hard you're actually cycling the bank.

If you've got a modern alternator with decent regulation (most are stable around 13.8-14.2V), a relay will work fine for topping up between runs. But here's where it falls apart: if you're solar-charging hard and then the engine kicks in, that relay doesn't manage the transition. You'll get voltage spikes that degrade batteries faster, especially lithium if you've gone that route.

I switched from a relay to a Victron Orion on my boat after the relay kept nuking my BMS. The DC-DC sorted the voltage regulation and actually lets me run my charger and alternator simultaneously without fireworks.

What's your leisure bank size and what're you solar-charging with? That'll determine whether you actually need the extra smarts or if a relay's genuinely sufficient for your use case.

Moor Lover
DontPanic
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1 year ago
#1737

Right, worth adding a practical angle here. The relay will work fine if your alternator's outputting a clean 14.2-14.4V consistently. Problem is most older alternators drift, especially under load—you'll end up overcharging or undercharging depending on engine RPM and what else you're running.

On my 6.5kWh setup I ditched the relay after six months because my leisure bank kept sitting at weird states of charge. Switched to a Victron Orion (bit pricey, but) and it properly regulates voltage and limits inrush current to your batteries. Game-changer if you're running lithium or trying to keep lead-acid healthy.

Real question: are you planning to upgrade to lithium down the line? Because if yes, a DC-DC is non-negotiable—most relays will kill a LiFePO4 bank eventually. If you're staying lead-acid and have a newer engine with stable alternator output, the relay's less critical. But you'll get better battery longevity with proper regulation.

What's your leisure bank capacity and alternator output

👍 Volt Stu

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