jebiruph
Well-Known Member
Well, given that the main battery connects to N2 which connects to N3 through the ESS fuse, then through the PCR to the aux battery and finally to N1, the jumper connected to N1 to N2 does bypass the aux battery and all the related components.They aren't bypassing anything. That's the confusion. They are jumping crank battery to electronics.
Since the batteries are in parallel, the crank battery actually is connected to N1 at all times as long as the PCR is closed.
Your main battery at 12 volts means it's dead or near dead - not enough to start the vehicle.
The cables are large enough the voltage drop would be minimal.
The explanations floating around are flawed.
The one and only way an aux battery could act this way is with an internal short. It's not that common and those who "need" to jump N1 to N2 have some other issues going on but are convinced of what they believe so there's no fixing that.
Read my discussions on batteries, voltages and other fun Jeep electrics.
As far as the illustrated aux battery behavior not being common, I agree. But at the time I was having to investigate the system behavior by physically disconnecting the aux battery, so that's what's behind the way it is explained. Where were you in 2018? I could have used the help.
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