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I actually agree with all your points and it's probably the advice I'd
give someone else. However, I'm opting for simplicity and economy over the certainty of being able to start the engine in all circumstances. I'm not even going to invest in the emergency battery. The proper place for that, as you say, is in a box hooked up with the combiner, etc. My emergency propulsion for this year at least, will be good ground tackle and the willingness to wait for a wind. I'm going to try hand starting. If it does prove impossible I'll invest in a more sophisticated system. This is also a boat with no major electrical loads. I'll also be upgrading a lot of stuff before starting long cruises. This will be a duff around close to home and get to know the boat summer. I'll probably be spending a lot more time working on the systems than sailing. Aside from saving money, I'll have a much better idea at the end of the summer exactly what the boat needs and how I want to set up a more complex system. Even on a cruise Downeast, sailing in to anchor and rowing ashore to pick up a $40 car battery for a jump start wouldn't be a major emergency in this part of the world. Another two or three hundred dollars could be spent on much more critical things at this point than avoiding the slight possibility of that exercise. -- Roger Long "Jeff" wrote in message ... I've mentioned this befo you should simply parallel the bank and install a small starting battery. If you want it to be high quality and "idiot proof" and a battery combiner (the smaller ones are cheap. Why invest in an "emergency" starter when the same money give you a proper solution? BTW, the small Yanmar will *usually* starts with under 5 seconds of cranking, but it isn't self bleeding, so it can get balky if the line gets dirty or airbound. I just started my two engines after winter layup - one fired quickly, but the other took about 30 seconds of cranking. My point is that in real life problems always come in groups - the morning your battery dies could also be the morning the fuel filter clogs. Why rely on a pack of D cells that cost the same as a proper battery? |
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