Re: Voltmeter indicates lower than actual voltage
Your reading at the battery is indicating the amount of voltage stored in the battery. Your reading at the gauge is showing what's available in the circuit after the blower is absorbing volts from the wiring harness.
Howdy,
No wiring harness "absorbs volts".
If you have voltage drop in any circuit, it will be due to poor connections either in the harness itself, fuse-blocks etc or at various ground connections.
Blower motors usually don't draw enough current to produce a significant voltage drop due to the wiring from the battery to the switch and then to the blower.
Lets say you have a blower motor that draws 10A current......and it's 15' (or 3m) from the battery to the blower. (I.E. 15' of wire)
To get a full 1V drop in voltage across that wire (12.5v to 11.5v), the wire itself would need to have resistance of 0.1 ohms. (V=I*R....... 0.1x10=1

)
Lets also say that you are using #12AWG wire in the circuit.
#12AWG wire has a resistance of
5.2 OHMs per 1000m!!
Through the magic of Electrical Engineering I calculate a 15' (about 3meters) piece of #12AWG wire as having
0.02 OHMs resistance.
0.02 OHMS of resistance would only produce a 0.2v drop in voltage!! which is insignificant.
your voltage drop is from somewhere else.
In pleasure boat marine electrical systems, electrical problems are almost always poor connections at engine block ground points, wire-end connectors and the cheap switches they use.
Check all your switches, connectors, and connections.
By connections I also mean any crimped connections on power supply wiring. Crimped connections can be the source of voltage drop if they weren't adequately sealed with heat shrink tubing etc....and even if they are "sealed" they can still be corroded.....
Switches can have contacts inside be burned and/or corroded.
Cheers,
Rick