Pat M
Active member
First comment- electrical/wiring is very new to me so please be patient with me especially with terminology.
So I'm going to rewire the whole John Deere boat. I want to try to minimize the number of wires this boat has going on. There is a nest of wires under the counsel. Some of the grounds (black wires) go right to the battery. The boat does have an older 4 switch panel with fuses for the lights (double switch- up for running lights only and down for running plus interior), bilge, aerator and for the 12v plug (cig plug). The positive wires leaving the switches are all twisted together (so only one wire has to go back to the battery). To reduce the number of single wires hanging the previous owner used a trailer wire set (with the 5 colors) to run from the switches on back to the lights, bilge and aerator and one for the main power line to the battery.
I want to reduce the wires and try to do the electrical properly. I did a little searching on West Marine and found their DC electrical panels http://www.westmarine.com/webapp/wcs/stores/servlet/ProductDisplay?productId=691078&catalogId=10001&langId=-1&storeId=11151&storeNum=10109&subdeptNum=10598&classNum=10601 . Prematurely I bought the 4 circuit + 2 12v power outlets, figuring I'd make the interior lights a switch by itself. Well I made two mistakes, (first one not all my fault) the 4th switch on the panel controls the 12v plugs so there are only really 3 open switches. Secondly I forgot about the two depth/fish finders, the gps and the marine radio. I don’t want to run their wires back to the battery individually. So I’m going to return it.
To my questions-
Is there some kind of panel/fuse box…ext. that I can connect all the positive wires and negative wires to and then run 1 main wire back to the battery? I don't really want a switch for all the other electrical stuff but is that the best route? If I do will that keep the battery from draining as fast while not in use? My old 16’ fishing boat had 2 aluminum panels under the counsel. They had a nut to loosen and slide a wire underneath and then tight it down, one on a positive and negative panel. Then the main power line ran off of that. I can’t find anything like that on west marine or any place else. And the idea of all those exposed wires makes me a little nervous.
What size (gauge) wire would I need?
Any other suggestions/pointers?
Most of the wires will either be under the floor or I will put them in some kind of tubing/hose and mount it to the side.
Sorry for the long message but I wanted to be thorough. Thanks for the help.
So I'm going to rewire the whole John Deere boat. I want to try to minimize the number of wires this boat has going on. There is a nest of wires under the counsel. Some of the grounds (black wires) go right to the battery. The boat does have an older 4 switch panel with fuses for the lights (double switch- up for running lights only and down for running plus interior), bilge, aerator and for the 12v plug (cig plug). The positive wires leaving the switches are all twisted together (so only one wire has to go back to the battery). To reduce the number of single wires hanging the previous owner used a trailer wire set (with the 5 colors) to run from the switches on back to the lights, bilge and aerator and one for the main power line to the battery.
I want to reduce the wires and try to do the electrical properly. I did a little searching on West Marine and found their DC electrical panels http://www.westmarine.com/webapp/wcs/stores/servlet/ProductDisplay?productId=691078&catalogId=10001&langId=-1&storeId=11151&storeNum=10109&subdeptNum=10598&classNum=10601 . Prematurely I bought the 4 circuit + 2 12v power outlets, figuring I'd make the interior lights a switch by itself. Well I made two mistakes, (first one not all my fault) the 4th switch on the panel controls the 12v plugs so there are only really 3 open switches. Secondly I forgot about the two depth/fish finders, the gps and the marine radio. I don’t want to run their wires back to the battery individually. So I’m going to return it.
To my questions-
Is there some kind of panel/fuse box…ext. that I can connect all the positive wires and negative wires to and then run 1 main wire back to the battery? I don't really want a switch for all the other electrical stuff but is that the best route? If I do will that keep the battery from draining as fast while not in use? My old 16’ fishing boat had 2 aluminum panels under the counsel. They had a nut to loosen and slide a wire underneath and then tight it down, one on a positive and negative panel. Then the main power line ran off of that. I can’t find anything like that on west marine or any place else. And the idea of all those exposed wires makes me a little nervous.
What size (gauge) wire would I need?
Any other suggestions/pointers?
Most of the wires will either be under the floor or I will put them in some kind of tubing/hose and mount it to the side.
Sorry for the long message but I wanted to be thorough. Thanks for the help.