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#1
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Winterize - battery?
For those of you who have gone through a winter with their boat
before, I'm curious about something. This is, pretty obviously, my first winter for the boat and I'm not sure how necessary it is to physically remove the batteries from the boat. I'll disconnect them, but they're in a difficult spot and I'd rather not have to kill myself getting them out. Also, on a related note... I'm assuming the digital hour meter I have isn't going to reset? Thanks! |
#2
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Winterize - battery?
werlax wrote:
For those of you who have gone through a winter with their boat before, I'm curious about something. This is, pretty obviously, my first winter for the boat and I'm not sure how necessary it is to physically remove the batteries from the boat. I'll disconnect them, but they're in a difficult spot and I'd rather not have to kill myself getting them out. Also, on a related note... I'm assuming the digital hour meter I have isn't going to reset? Thanks! If you're in a cold climate, I suggest you yank the batteries, take them home, clean them up, add distilled water if they are wet cells, and store them where the temp stays above freezing. Then I'd top them up once a month with an auto-shut off charger. That's what I do with my boat batteries. -- __________________________________________________ __________ Email sent to will never reach me. |
#3
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Winterize - battery?
"werlax" wrote in message om... For those of you who have gone through a winter with their boat before, I'm curious about something. This is, pretty obviously, my first winter for the boat and I'm not sure how necessary it is to physically remove the batteries from the boat. I'll disconnect them, but they're in a difficult spot and I'd rather not have to kill myself getting them out. Also, on a related note... I'm assuming the digital hour meter I have isn't going to reset? Thanks! Ideally you would charge them periodically, although if you store the boat in cold enough conditions this doesn't seem to be necessary. An hour meter that reset everytime the power went off like an old digital clock would be a pretty poor design. Easy to find out however. del cecchi |
#4
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Winterize - battery?
It's fine to just leave them in the boat. As long as they are fully charged
they can not freeze. It would be nice if you could charge them a little a few times during the winter but not critical. Wet cell batteries are best if used occasionally. "werlax" wrote in message om... For those of you who have gone through a winter with their boat before, I'm curious about something. This is, pretty obviously, my first winter for the boat and I'm not sure how necessary it is to physically remove the batteries from the boat. I'll disconnect them, but they're in a difficult spot and I'd rather not have to kill myself getting them out. Also, on a related note... I'm assuming the digital hour meter I have isn't going to reset? Thanks! |
#5
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Winterize - battery?
I live in Minnesota where it gets -30 and never take them out because
it's too much of a hassle. I top them with water, charge them up and put them to bed for the winter. On one boat I put one of those 600 milliamp maintainer/chargers and the other one gets a regular charge every month. I clean the terminals in the spring and have never had a problem. Don't try this with a marginal battery, though. If it loses charge it could freeze and now you have a real mess with battery acid all over. Capt. Jeff |
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