mattsmall1972
Petty Officer 1st Class
- Joined
- May 14, 2006
- Messages
- 238
On my previous boat, I removed the Perko 2-battery switch and replaced it with a battery isolator so that both batteries would charge while running. I then wired the starter to one battery, and left the other battery as the house battery. The house battery has a run to a solenoid which is turned on by a master rocker switch on my panel. All of the electronics are run from the house battery via the solenoid. This is a really nice setup as it prevents the need to turn the big Perko switch on/off (it was in a weird place) and prevents the electronics from slowly draining the house battery when not in use.
I have a new boat, and wanted to do the same thing. I bought the exact same battery isolator and solenoid. Up under the console is a stereo amplifier with a large battery cable that runs straight to the battery. I cut this cable and left it running to the battery, along with enough cable for the amp as well. I hooked up both sides of the cut wire to the main lugs on the solenoid , as well as a smaller extra cable on both sides. The smaller cable on the battery side is meant to go to the master rocker switch. The master rocker switch will then turn the solenoid on/off. The smaller cable on the other lug will go to the accessories panel.
I got into the console last night and wired everything up. The solenoid does not come with any instructions, and I figured that when powered, the solenoid's main lugs become a continuous path. When I powered up the solenoid, the voltage I was reading at point #1 was positive voltage, but negative at point #2. I am really confused about what's going on.
Just to be clear, this is the solenoid I purchased: http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0064MX7US?psc=1&redirect=true&ref_=oh_aui_detailpage_o00_s00
This is a schematic I just did to show you the hookup:
Now, I am not quite sure what else is going on, but my voltage measurements were weird. I was only seeing about 8 volts at point 1, while I was sometimes seeing -8 at 2, sometimes -12. I tried activating the solenoid switch both ways but it was the same. What was interesting was that I never heard a distinct click as if it was on, but I could clearly see the voltage change from 0 to -12 using the multimeter.
Could this amplifier cable be my problem? I haven't tried changing the direction of the voltage flow across the solenoid yet, and I am going to do that, but I wanted to throw this out there to see if there's something I'm missing. This is a basic electrical switch, it shouldn't be that hard.
I have a new boat, and wanted to do the same thing. I bought the exact same battery isolator and solenoid. Up under the console is a stereo amplifier with a large battery cable that runs straight to the battery. I cut this cable and left it running to the battery, along with enough cable for the amp as well. I hooked up both sides of the cut wire to the main lugs on the solenoid , as well as a smaller extra cable on both sides. The smaller cable on the battery side is meant to go to the master rocker switch. The master rocker switch will then turn the solenoid on/off. The smaller cable on the other lug will go to the accessories panel.
I got into the console last night and wired everything up. The solenoid does not come with any instructions, and I figured that when powered, the solenoid's main lugs become a continuous path. When I powered up the solenoid, the voltage I was reading at point #1 was positive voltage, but negative at point #2. I am really confused about what's going on.
Just to be clear, this is the solenoid I purchased: http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0064MX7US?psc=1&redirect=true&ref_=oh_aui_detailpage_o00_s00
This is a schematic I just did to show you the hookup:

Now, I am not quite sure what else is going on, but my voltage measurements were weird. I was only seeing about 8 volts at point 1, while I was sometimes seeing -8 at 2, sometimes -12. I tried activating the solenoid switch both ways but it was the same. What was interesting was that I never heard a distinct click as if it was on, but I could clearly see the voltage change from 0 to -12 using the multimeter.
Could this amplifier cable be my problem? I haven't tried changing the direction of the voltage flow across the solenoid yet, and I am going to do that, but I wanted to throw this out there to see if there's something I'm missing. This is a basic electrical switch, it shouldn't be that hard.