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I don't have any buddies with clean fingernailsIf you have a buddy with dirt under his fingernails, call him over.
I don't have any buddies with clean fingernailsIf you have a buddy with dirt under his fingernails, call him over.
Thanks for the suggestion. I will check this out. Boat is on the hard getting dreaded exhaust repair done to the 225'sDisconnect the + cable from each battery, and see if the lights go out. Which battery? If not, you have another battery. If so, disconnecting will save your battery until you have time to work on finding the problem.
If your boat is in the water, that won't be a good idea, since normally that would disable the bilge pump.
I suppose that this is possible. However, when i removed the terminals i zip tied them together and marked with tape so not to mess up the replacement. I just need to get to the boat to take apart the switches to see how they are wired. I can tell you that the second battery is wired in parallel on each side. Meaning, the poss and neg connected to the battery going to the switch. Thank you!Something doesn't sound right. You said "a switch for each bank of 2." The switches would normally switch you from one side to the other, not switch between the pair on a given side
You are certain both sides are parallel pairs? Both sides are wired as the Start battery for motors? The Starboard bank is "1" on both switches and the Port bank is "2" on both switches?
The Starboard switch controls the start power to the Starboard Motor AND the House. The Port switch controls the start power to the port motor?
If the PO added a battery he my have changed the setup also. You had it all apart so it might not be back together the way it was working.
I would put it a different way.For a stock set up, think of the switches as each serving a different bus. The starboard switch typically serves the house bus which powers all items in the boat such as lights and electronics. The port switch typically serves only the port engine only and maybe the generator or other major accessories. The switch simply provides power to it’s dedicated bus from either set of parallel batteries one or two.
No, that is not correct. The breaker is pretty much always "on". It will only trip if there's an issue. So this is not a conclusive test.So I am at boat now. I removed both batteries from the starboard side. I removed the battery switch which appears to be wired correctly per my owners manual and Skunks picture above. However, when I switch the port side switch on 1,2, both everything works. All pumps, lights and both motors. Clearly, nothing is running through the red button breaker on the starboard side. When I turn the switch to off, the only thing to turn off is the port side motor. I’ll put the starboard side back together now and take apart the port side to see what happens
No I don’t. I don’t actually start the motors because the lowers are off and no hose hook up. When I test for start I just hit it to hear if the starter turns.I don’t think that you want to troubleshoot by turning your battery switches off with your motors running, just to see what happens.