Mel Taylor
Chief Petty Officer
- Joined
- Jun 25, 2009
- Messages
- 489
My son has a 14ft Lone Star aluminum boat with a 1985, 25 Horse, tiller steered, Evinrude outboard on it. Starter button is, of course, on the motor
The battery is located under the middle bench seat.
He is doing some refurb work on the boat and needs to reroute the cables between battery and engine.
My suggestion was to mount a bus bar such as the one shown here: http://mandmmarine.com/bluesea150amperebusbar-1-1-2.aspx under a small shelf he has running between back and center seats, connect the battery cables to one side of the bus bar and connect the cables from the engine to the other side of the bus bar. Cables from battery to bus bar would be pretty much permanent and hidden. Cables from motor to bus bar would be hidden but easy to get to and disconnect if he wanted to remove the motor from the boat.
A further consideration is that this particular bus bar has terminals for lights and other small amp draw items.
Problem is that the bus bar is rated for 150 amps and we cannot find any information on how much amperage the starter on this motor draws. Does anyone have any idea whether a 150 amp bus bar will handle the amperage draw from the starter or not? Neither of us care much for the smell of melting insulation and overheated battery cables.
Maintenance and repair manuals seem to be particularly silent on this subject.
The battery is located under the middle bench seat.
He is doing some refurb work on the boat and needs to reroute the cables between battery and engine.
My suggestion was to mount a bus bar such as the one shown here: http://mandmmarine.com/bluesea150amperebusbar-1-1-2.aspx under a small shelf he has running between back and center seats, connect the battery cables to one side of the bus bar and connect the cables from the engine to the other side of the bus bar. Cables from battery to bus bar would be pretty much permanent and hidden. Cables from motor to bus bar would be hidden but easy to get to and disconnect if he wanted to remove the motor from the boat.
A further consideration is that this particular bus bar has terminals for lights and other small amp draw items.
Problem is that the bus bar is rated for 150 amps and we cannot find any information on how much amperage the starter on this motor draws. Does anyone have any idea whether a 150 amp bus bar will handle the amperage draw from the starter or not? Neither of us care much for the smell of melting insulation and overheated battery cables.
Maintenance and repair manuals seem to be particularly silent on this subject.