Car electrical guys - need battery upgrade advice

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Mar 27, 2019
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Location
Northern Nevada
Hoping some guys with experience can advise here on upgrading my truck's battery and electrical system. Electrical in general is voodoo to me, so I need this broken down like an absolute rookie.

Where I live and how I daily drive is hard on batteries. Often over 100F in the summers, and down to 0F and the teens in winters. Plus, there's no real commute - generally just a 5-10 minute trip daily each way, not more than 35mph, sometimes with several starts-ups with errands. After killing a couple of batteries in the deep cold, I've had fewer problems in just keeping a solar-panel trickle-charging the battery from the cab.

I'd like to upgrade the truck's electrical to something much more bulletproof, and overbuilt to the extent feasible. Looking for ridiculously reliable and durable.

The truck is a 2019 Tundra TRD.

I've read that with as little as a battery-tray swap, I can upgrade to a Group 31 battery. Is this the case - and, any downsides?

What about dual batteries, or upgrading the alternator?

What other stuff needs to be done with any of this? Fuses, terminals, etc?

I get deep into the middle of nowhere in Nevada regularly across the year, both snow and summer heat, so a lot of what I do would probably benefit from an overlanding concept, even if I'm not really "overlanding".

Thoughts and advice greatly appreciated.
 

I've done that upgrade setup to several trucks because of running winches and stereo systems, they make a huge difference in how efficiently your battery is charged.

I'd suggest an upgraded (higher amperage) alternator before adding a second one. You're not underpowered, you're just not charging enough time.

A AGM battery is much more stable in temperature extremes. Any parts store will have them. I've had good success with the Oriley brand ones in 3 vehicles.
 
You have a pile of issues that probably need more than one solution.

I can't speak for the tray but extra battery capacity never hurts. What are you on, a 27 now?

If it was me, I would add a second battery before upgrading my alternator, with an isolator between them. I sure wouldn't bother messing around with replacing wire looms, fuse boxes, etc. Those are those classic "you won't get out of it what you put in" expenses. But if you install it properly, a second battery can provide a lot of peace of mind when dealing with things like vampire loads, lights left on overnight, that USB cigarette-lighter phone charger that stays on when your truck is off, etc. It's also really nice to have if you're going to do something like install a front winch.)

The solar trickle charger is a good idea that should address the short-trip-battery-can't-recharge concern. But on top of that, IMO one of the best upgrades ANY vehicle owner can make with almost no effort is one of those lithium jump packs. It's not just about your own truck - it's an easy hand-out at a campground or kids sports field when somebody needs a jump so you don't have to work your way around for your jumper cables to reach (or even move at all).
 
The solar trickle charger is a good idea that should address the short-trip-battery-can't-recharge concern. But on top of that, IMO one of the best upgrades ANY vehicle owner can make with almost no effort is one of those lithium jump packs. It's not just about your own truck - it's an easy hand-out at a campground or kids sports field when somebody needs a jump so you don't have to work your way around for your jumper cables to reach (or even move at all).
I keep a Noco in all our vehicles. So handy in so many situations.
 
A good AGM battery is probably the first step. If you can squeeze in a bigger one, all the better. Odesseys are primo, but spendy for sure. An X2 or Delco gold is probably not too far behind in quality.

Bigger cables done well wouldn't be a terrible addition for the relatively low cost and time to install.

Best bang for the buck is probably the jump pack.

If the issue is you're not driving enough to charge the battery, adding a second probably won't help. Id consider putting an onboard charger on there if you can plug it in from time to time to top off the battery. Victron makes a nice one you can dial in the charge parameters via Bluetooth.
 
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