Misc. Electrical / Dash Questions
			 
			 
			
		
		
		
			
			I would have the hobbs meter, instruments, and panel lights on the ignition 
switch. The bilge pumps should bypass any main disconnect switches and be 
fused within 12" of the battery. All other electrical devices should be 
powered thru a main disconnect switch. 
Jim 
"Douglas St. Clair"  wrote in message 
... 
 Greetings from Rochester, NY... 
 
 I pulled the wood dash off of my '70 Century Resorter (inboard) to replace 
 it with a newly varnished piece of Okume.  Now I'm trying to figure out 
how 
 I should put it all back together (always an afterthought).  Here are some 
 miscellaneous questions, any advice would be greatly appreciated! 
 
 First off, here's a list of the switches: 
 1 Navigation lights (push-pull, off/on/on) 
 2 Panel lights (push-pull) 
 3 Windshield wipers (push-pull) 
 4 Blower (push-pull) 
 5 Fore Bilge Pump (?, off-auto-on) 
 6 Aft Bilge Pump (?, off-auto-on) 
 7 Horn (momentary) 
 
 Now the questions... 
 
 1. Bilge Pump Switches.  A previous owner installed two bilge pump switch 
 panels (fuse / off /on /auto / indicator light) through the front dash 
(not 
 dashboard).  These are an eye-sore, mainly since they're not lined up 
 properly and are different styles.  Is there any reason not to use two 
 chrome push-pull switches (off - on - on), wired for off, auto, and on? 
 These mounted in the dashboard would restore a nice look to the controls. 
 
 2. Ignition Control.  What electrical components should require the 
ignition 
 to be on for them to work?  I'm guessing the bilge pumps are the only 
items 
 that need constant power in order to leave them in "auto" mode".  What 
about 
 the blower: is it ok to leave the ignition on for four minutes without the 
 engine running?  Is there any reason not to wire all the switches as 
 always-live? 
 
 3.  Are there any websites or other resources out there that show ideal 
 wiring diagrams for a relatively simple boat like this?  Right now the 
 wiring is spaghetti-esque from the 34 years various contributions of 
 different owners.  I'm a neat freak, and need to get everything "in 
order". 
 I just don't know the best practice for this.  I'm thinking I'll need one 
 bus bar for the negative lead, and two hot feed fuse blocks (one is always 
 on the other is ignition switched).  From the fuse blocks do the 
individual 
 leads go to the switches then on to the various components?  Are there any 
 special considerations for the gauges (tach, volt, dc, temp, oil 
pressure)? 
 What are the connections for the gauges, is it simply negative, hot, and a 
 feed wire from the engine? 
 
 Thanks! 
 Doug 
 
 
 
 
 
 
		 
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
		
	
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