POWERBOTERS GUIDE TO ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS MAINTENANACE TROUBLESHOOTING & IMPROVEMENTS MANUAL

Page 90

POWERBOATER’S GUIDE TO ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS content (soft water) is fine for batteries; some is terrible. The best bet is to check with a local battery shop and ask about their experience with the local water.

Keep tabs on both your engine’s alternator and your boat’s 110-volt battery charger, if you have one. Overcharging or undercharging is damaging to any battery. Overcharging will boil the electrolyte and rattle the lead off the plates. Undercharging will allow the lead sulfate to permanently harden, reducing the surface area of the plates. A sulfated battery will not develop full power and will eventually have to be replaced.

Battery Installations There are a number of ways to hook up and combine batteries. For the small, open boat, the choices are fairly simple and easy to understand. But, if your boat is a medium-sized cruiser with twin engines and both a bank of starting batteries (for starting the engines) and a bank of house batteries (for supplying your needs while away from the dock), the battery systems can get fairly complex. I will only attempt to present the most common systems here. First, refresh your memory on series and parallel wiring hookups as we discussed back in chapter 1. These two methods of connecting battery cells and batteries are the primary methods builders use to alter system voltage and amp-hour capacity. Also, you need to know a little more about battery characteristics. To create a 12-volt lead-acid battery, manufacturers connect a series of six cells, which each produce a little more than 2 volts, to attain the 12 volts in batteries used by most boats. Larger boats might use 24-volt systems, and some boats even use a combination 12- and 24-volt system, but these are just 12-volt batteries connected in series to get the higher voltage. When battery cells are connected in series, the voltage is multiplied. Thus, multiplying the number of cells in a lead-acid battery by two gives the final system voltage. If we hook these cells or batteries up in parallel, the voltage stays the same, but the amperage of the system is multiplied. Thus, if you have 76

two 6-volt batteries with 25 amps each, wired in series, you’ll end up with a 12-volt bank having 25 amps of current available. If you wire these same two batteries in parallel, you’ll have a 6-volt system with 50 amps of current available. The majority of recreational boats today operate on 12-volt battery systems, so we’ll stick with those. Figure 5-8 shows two pairs of 12-volt batteries. One pair is connected in series, the other in parallel, and the resulting amperage and voltage of each arrangement is shown. This is very important. I’ve seen more than one boater trying to connect batteries in the spring, and they just can’t remember how they were attached when they took them out. Here’s a quick tip to prevent this confusion: Simply mark the cables when you remove your batteries in the fall so you’ll remember how they go when you’re ready for your spring launch. Remember that connecting 24 volts to a 12-volt system can be a very interesting but very expensive mistake. The parallel hookup is not what you’ll find on your boat, as a bat-

Parallel Batteries

Series Batteries Fig. 5-8. Two 12-volt battery pairs, one in series, one in parallel. Remember that series connections combine the voltages of the batteries connected; parallel connections combine the available amperage but do not change the voltage.


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Resources

1min
page 214

Index

18min
pages 215-223

Installing Your Own Radar

5min
pages 205-206

Glossary

14min
pages 207-213

Galvanic Isolators

6min
pages 191-193

Power Supply

3min
page 196

Installing a GPS Receiver

2min
page 204

AC Generators

5min
pages 189-190

Selecting a DC-to-AC Inverter

17min
pages 184-188

Checking Voltage, Continuity, and Polarity on AC Circuits

7min
pages 181-183

AC Overcurrent Protection

4min
pages 176-177

Ground-Fault Circuit Interrupters

2min
page 180

Color Coding for AC Wiring

3min
page 172

Comparisons between AC and DC Circuits

6min
pages 173-175

The Future

1min
page 169

General Instrument Troubleshooting

16min
pages 163-168

Adding a New Compact-Disc Player

7min
pages 158-160

Abnormal Instrument Readings

3min
page 162

Installing a New Cabin Light

3min
page 153

Engine Ignition Switch

4min
pages 147-148

Installing a New Bilge Pump

10min
pages 154-157

Other Outboard-Engine Starter-Motor Problems

1min
page 149

Testing the Neutral-Safety Switch

3min
page 146

Outboard-Engine Starter Circuits

10min
pages 142-145

Beyond the Basics: Outboard and PWC Ignition Systems

6min
pages 124-125

Testing Your Stop Switch

3min
page 133

Starter-Motor Problems and Solutions

2min
page 138

Final Checks and Ignition Timing

8min
pages 134-136

Troubleshooting Starter-Motor Circuits

6min
pages 139-141

MerCruiser Thunderbolt IV and Thunderbolt V Systems

7min
pages 121-123

Outboard and PWC Ignition Tests

19min
pages 126-132

Solar Cells

2min
page 113

Battery Installations

15min
pages 90-95

Outboard-Engine Charging Systems

5min
pages 108-109

Testing Your Batteries

10min
pages 96-99

Shore-Power Battery Charging Systems and Installations

9min
pages 110-112

Battery Maintenance and Testing

4min
pages 88-89

Battery Safety

5min
pages 86-87

Which Battery Is Right for You?

9min
pages 83-85

Types of Lead-Acid Batteries

9min
pages 80-82

Connecting the Dots: Making Wiring and Connection Repairs

8min
pages 73-78

Wire Routing and Support

4min
pages 71-72

Acceptable Locations for Fuses and Circuit Breakers

4min
pages 69-70

Ignition Protection

1min
page 66

Levels of Circuit Protection

1min
page 68

Fuses and Circuit Breakers

14min
pages 60-65

Testing Fuses and Circuit Breakers

2min
page 67

Wire Insulation

2min
pages 57-59

Wire Size

2min
page 56

Basic Wiring

3min
page 55

Using Your Multimeter

10min
pages 44-47

Expanding the Basic Circuit

3min
page 33

Wire Identification and the ABYC Color Code

8min
pages 29-32

Measuring Amperage

4min
pages 48-50

Tools

2min
pages 24-25

Drawing Your Own Wiring Diagram

9min
pages 36-38

Ohm’s Law and What It Can Tell Us

8min
pages 19-21

Voltage Drop

2min
page 22
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