Installing a Dual Battery System on a Honda Pioneer 1000 with True® Dual Battery Kit
Summary of the Project Setup for Auxiliary Battery and Electrical System Upgrade
Presenters: Rob Spari and Brendan Hillary
Purpose: To clearly demonstrate how to wire and install a dual battery setup on Honda Pioneer 1000, addressing confusion left by other tutorials
The speaker walks through a detailed DIY project to install an auxiliary battery system with a power management setup, primarily for a Honda side-by-side (UTV/ATV).
Components Used:
- Auxiliary Battery: Chose a Mighty Max battery (
$54) over more expensive options like the Odyssey Extreme ($185). - Original True® UTV battery Isolator kit complete with cables, screws, and dual voltage meter: Purchased from a Honda side-by-side store. Included a dual voltage meter (accidentally bought a second one separately).
- Key-On Power Harness: Initially tried a plug-and-play adapter to tap into the cigarette lighter but couldn’t access it. Used a fuse tap (Busman mini fuse adapter) on the accessory fuse instead.
- Fuse Box: Chose a 10-circuit version with blown-fuse indicator lights. In hindsight, a smaller 6-circuit narrow version would have been better for easier mounting.
- Bus Bars (Positive & Negative): Installed both to simplify wiring and avoid reconnecting directly to battery terminals.
- Miscellaneous Supplies:
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- Red heat shrink, red electrical tape for color coding.
- Extra battery leads and loop/spade connectors for various wire gauges.
- 3/8” flex tubing for wire protection.
- Green Guard insulation board ($5 from Lowe’s) used as a fuse box mounting base.
- M6x20mm bolts for the battery posts.
- Klein Tools wire stripper and a heat gun for clean wiring and shrink tubing.
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Wiring and Installation Notes:
Battery Tender (Trickle Charger):
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- Added a connector for easy charging access.
- Routed safely away from hot engine components.
- Zip-tied out through the front grille with a weatherproof cap.
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Switch Plate:
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- From PBR Products; mounted using screws (not rivets) for future serviceability.
- Used a DeWalt multi-tool to cut a rectangle into the panel for mounting switches.
Wiring & Mounting:
- Mounted the True® Honda battery isolator with Velcro and routed positive cables from both batteries to it.
- Installed bus bars to reduce direct battery connections.
- Added quick disconnect for the battery tender, routed carefully away from heat and out through the grille.
- Mounted Stinger relay on plastic using washers and screws to avoid metal drilling.
- Switch plate cut and installed using an oscillating tool.
- Dual voltmeter and USB charger wired to activate with key-on power.
Fuse Box Mounting:
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- Fuse box mounted on air filter cover using Velcro and Green Guard board to overcome irregular surface.
Testing and Final Setup
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Verified voltages before and after turning on the key accessory switch.
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Confirmed proper operation of:
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- Voltage at bus bars and True Honda battery isolator kit
- Dual voltage meter displaying both batteries’ charge (~14V when charging).
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Dual volt meter and USB charger activate only with key-on power.
Installation Details & Lessons Learned
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- Originally bought a separate voltage meter but later realized the True Honda dual battery isolator kit is a complete unit.
- Switched from the cigarette lighter key-on tap to a fuse tap after struggling to access the harness behind the dash.
- Used red electrical tape and red heat shrink tubing for clarity and aesthetics.
- Battery post bolts were too short; replaced with M6x20mm bolts (1.0 pitch).
- Used foam board (Green Guard Project Panel) from Lowe’s to level mounting surface for the fuse box.
- Reoriented the auxiliary battery to improve cable access, which forced a relocation of the fuse box.
- Consider a smaller fuse box to save space.
- Use both bus bars to simplify connections.
- Be flexible—original mounting plans were changed due to spatial constraints.
- Use color-coded wiring and protective tubing for better organization and durability.
- Always test before finalizing wire routing and mounting.
