John in CR said:
"Isolated", "floating with respect to ground", etc are terms I don't understand.
Isolated just means that the output is not electrically connected to the input at all, on either positive or negative. If you used a multimeter set to ohms, and measured from either input terminal to either output terminal (with the charger or device not plugged into anything), then there should be no reading at all. If you get continuity in any pair, it's not isolated and shouldn't be tried as series chargers.
Basically, some power supplies and chargers (and DC-DC converters) use their input ground (or sometimes AC neutral) directly or indirectly connected to their output ground (negative output), which means if you connect two of them in series, then the one on the "bottom", with it's positive connected to the negative of the other one, will be shorted across.
If it's already hooked to a battery before it's plugged in (or switched on in the case of switches that disconnect both sides of the input), you'll *also* short out the battery it's hooked up to.
I've done this with 2 separate but identical pairs of chargers and it worked fine. None of them has a ground plug for the 110v to the wall.
That's probably why it works with those, in that they are "floating ground"; they are also isolated inside between input and output.
It sounds like I should definitely not try to put my 12V charger for car batteries in series with 2 Bosch chargers, since it seems different in that it had a 3rd ground wire and will come on when seeing 0 volts and not turn itself off, so it works differently.
It is perfectly possible that it is also isolated, but you'd have to do that ohm test first before hooking it up.
Even if it's safe to hook up, it still won't charge as fast with one lower-current capable supply in it, assuming it has some protection other than a fuse for that overcurrent protection. If all it does is pop the overcurrent protection when too much is passed thru it, then you would have to limit the current from the other two chargers as well, down to whatever the third one can handle. If it's got some physical property of the electronics that prevents more than it's current limit from being drawn thru it (regardless of source) it might work fine without any fiddling around.
I'm unclear if or how the charge cutoff tuning diodes will affect the chargers starting. especially when I need to trim the total down by about 23v.
Maybe put a switch in there that shorts around (some of) the diodes for when you first turn it on to charge, then after it's started the charge process turn the switch off to force it to go thru the diodes.
Better heatsink them well, though, since all the current for the charging will be flowing thru each one.
