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A real boat related question! Basic 12V electrical stuff....

I just got a new boat which came as plain as you can get. Just a smaller 18' bowrider. I have now purchased a basic Garmin fishfinder and a Alpine marine CD player/stereo and a couple of speakers.

Now the hard part: installing and wiring these gadgets. So here are some of the questions that come to mind:

1) as far as I can tell, I have only one, unused, "Accessory" switch on the console. Should I plan to connect the fishfinder to that switch? Am I right to think that the stereo does not really have to be on a switch?

2) How do I connect the stereo to the battery? Should it be done at the battery terminals or is it OK to splice the red battery wire (or connect it to the fuse box?)?

3) there is no metal near the casing around the CD player/stereo. What should I ground the stereo's black wire to? Am I correct to assume that wiring to the stereo's own harness is not a good idea?

Andre

Melandre
Nov 2
2005
It's much easier to use a buss bar than to try and slam a bunch of fittings behind a single screw. You can run heavy gauge wire (big benefits) from the + and - battery terminals to a location near your electronics bay. Connect one wire to a buss for positive connections, and the other wire to a buss for negative. Wire in an "inline" fuse between the positive buss and each electronic gizmo. Ground each gizmo to the negative buss.

You don't need to wire through the "accessory" switch if it is of inadequate capacity. You can add a switch to the heavy wires running to the electronics buss bars.

chuckgould.chu...
Nov 3
@bignews7.bellsouth.net:

Chapman Piloting and Seamanship http://search.barnesandnoble.com/booksearch/isbnInquiry.asp? userid=S51mpITCZO&isbn=1588160890&itm=1

IMO, every boat owner should have a copy of this for all things nautical. It includes a good guide to vessel electrical systems.

Boatowner's Mechanical and Electrical Manual http://search.barnesandnoble.com/booksearch/isbnInquiry.asp? userid=S51mpITCZO&isbn=0071432388&itm=1

The reference, everything you ever wanted to know and more...

Jim
Nov 2
Since it is new and you don't have any bad stuff beyond what the builder did, I would strart with a quality fuse block in a waterproof box for your new toys. Take this opportunity to fix any other ugly work like open crimps or other shortcuts the builder may have taken. Boats are hostile enough environments for electrics. Try to give yourself a decent chance. Try to have every splice or fuse in a waterproof box if you can. Homerunn everything, wire is cheap. You will thank yourself when the stuff still works in a few years. gfretwell
Nov 2
My Sea Ray had a factory cassette wired to the accessory switch. I replaced the cassette with an indash MP3 player. I added the fishfinder to the same switch & fuse. I think it's important to switch the cd player because it continues to draw from the battery if left live. I've forgotten my accessory switch on (fishfinder off) and the turned-off cd player could kill the battery in 2 or 3 days. There will be a memory wire on the cd player which goes separately to the the battery to retain settings. I ran that wire right back to the battery and put my own fuse on it. I put it on its own crimp-on connector and screw it to the battery post along with the main wire. My MP3 player, btw, went in the glove box on the passenger side of the boat. Luckily there was an existing unit there and the wires were already in place because it would have been impossible to run wires from the dash to the passenger side without going all the way to the stern first. Denis
Nov 3
Depends on what you want to do. I'm sure that the Alpine has a clock Shortwave
Nov 2
You don't need to use the switch at all. Probably both units come with in line fuses. Just attach both fused wires to the hot side of the fuse block. Look around and you will find a common ground point. It might just be a screw post. You should see a few black wires all coming to that point. The keep alive voltage for the radio presets and clock is usually a yellow wire with an in line fuse. That should go to the same hot point as the other fused wires as long as there is not a master off switch or battery disconnect. Read all the instruction sheets before you start. Fire the units up before you mount them permanently. You want to make sure your compass won't be affected by the units where you plan to mount them. JIMinFL

"Melandre" <melandre@gmail.com> wrote in message

JIMinFL
Nov 3
Is it a switch or a circuit breaker? Not everything needs to be DSK
Nov 2
   

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