66Holiday924
Chief Petty Officer
- Joined
- Aug 21, 2017
- Messages
- 586
I'm saying, if you didn't have the trolling motor, your boat should be able to operate with no problem on one battery. You should be able to fish for hours listening to your radio, fish finder going, ship to shore on, and still be able to start your boat, no problem. Marine electronics don't use much power. So I'm saying a second battery just for the trolling motor.
If you want to do 3 batteries, I would have it set up so that the 3rd battery is easily accessible and taken on and off the boat whenever you use it to fish. I would keep the 3rd battery on a shelf in the basement, on a tender, otherwise there is no way to keep it charged. Unless you're docked and have shore power, your options are kind of limited. You could run an extension cord to the boat and keep a tender on it while it's trailered at your house, so all you have to do is unhook the tender and go... If you get a battery tender it will tell you if the battery is good too. It'll have a green light for good, amber for bad.
If you want to do 3 batteries, I would have it set up so that the 3rd battery is easily accessible and taken on and off the boat whenever you use it to fish. I would keep the 3rd battery on a shelf in the basement, on a tender, otherwise there is no way to keep it charged. Unless you're docked and have shore power, your options are kind of limited. You could run an extension cord to the boat and keep a tender on it while it's trailered at your house, so all you have to do is unhook the tender and go... If you get a battery tender it will tell you if the battery is good too. It'll have a green light for good, amber for bad.
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