Hello everyone, It's been a while since I've been on here. I've done some minor work to my tracker to make it a little more "practical"

. I'm especially enjoying the fully bed-lined interior!


As you can see, I have a homemade light bar on there. I have it wired through a 12v relay and a switch. It works great!
Problem is, with the light bar and headlights running (No stereo, no heater, no seat warmer) the TOTAL battery draw is ~30A. This means at idle, it's discharging the battery, as well as idling rough

The light bar itself draws about 20A (55watt x4)
It's a "brand new" rebuilt alternator.
Any ideas how to proceed from here? If I run a second battery w/ isolator (Or different circuit) , will my 55A alternator be strained too much? I'll never run more then the light bar and headlights, but it would be nice to be able to have the heat on in a blizzard at -50.
Thank guys,
Andrew