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boat help needed please - electical ??
Hi. I want to put my boat in the slip. It's a 1988 maxum bowrider,
mercruiser I/O. I tried to start it, but it appears the battery is dead. I tried to jump start it with the jumper, but it would not start. The voltmeter on the dash indicates 0 bolts. Usually when you hook up the jumper cables, the voltmeter will jump to 12 volts as soon as the wires are connected. I replaced the battery - same problem. I sanded the connectors to remove any oxidation - made no difference. Turning the key, nothing either. The stereo turns on and plays music, but the marine radio will not. I checked all the fuses under the dash and they all seem ok. Does anyone have any suggestions? I am a novise boater and bought a slip for the first time, but need to get the boat going before putting in the water. I've trailered it the last 3 years with little problems. PLEASE HELP! my e-mail is Thank you! |
boat help needed please - electical ??
There's a big 50A or so breaker in the engine compartment ... mine's
quite visible up front, to the left. Do I know what it's for ... no ... but maybe it needs to be reset? |
boat help needed please - electical ??
Tried it. I pressed as hard as I could but the button wouldn't go in
any farther. |
boat help needed please - electical ??
Only one battery? If you have two or more, maybe your 1/2/both/off (or
similar) switch is set incorrectly? If you only have one, and some stuff plays, maybe it's your ignition switch? Only other thing I can think is that your ground wire is disconnected at the other end from the battery, maybe at the engine/starter? |
boat help needed please - electical ??
wrote in message oups.com... I tried to start it, but it appears the battery is dead. I tried to jump start it with the jumper, but it would not start. The voltmeter on the dash indicates 0 bolts. Usually when you hook up the jumper cables, the voltmeter will jump to 12 volts as soon as the wires are connected. I replaced the battery - same problem. I sanded the connectors to remove any oxidation - made no difference. Turning the key, nothing either. The stereo turns on and plays music, but the marine radio will not. I checked all the fuses under the dash and they all seem ok. I don't know your boat, but my first checks would be: 1. Check and clean *all* high amperage circuit connections - that includes the earth returns, often forgotten. 2. When you select 'start', listen for the solenoid switch to click. If it doesn't click, clean *all* the low amperage solenoid connections, including the earth returns. 3. If these don't work, get your portable multimeter out of the attic. Lift the positive terminal off the battery and check the circuit resistance through the starter motor, then through the solenoid. Both should show just a few ohms. If they don't, there's a break in the motor/solenoid circuit. If they're OK - 4. Check the resistance through the circuits from the battery terminals - with the switch made. After this, you should have narrowed the fault down to either a line break, or a high resistance joint, and you'd know whether it's in the solenoid circuit or the starter circuit. Best of luck! -- JimB http://www.jimbaerselman.f2s.com/ Describing some Greek and Spanish cruising areas 4. Check the resistance from further up the circuit - nearer the battery and trace |
boat help needed please - electical ??
Check the ground connected to the engine.
"News f2s" wrote in message ... wrote in message oups.com... I tried to start it, but it appears the battery is dead. I tried to jump start it with the jumper, but it would not start. The voltmeter on the dash indicates 0 bolts. Usually when you hook up the jumper cables, the voltmeter will jump to 12 volts as soon as the wires are connected. I replaced the battery - same problem. I sanded the connectors to remove any oxidation - made no difference. Turning the key, nothing either. The stereo turns on and plays music, but the marine radio will not. I checked all the fuses under the dash and they all seem ok. I don't know your boat, but my first checks would be: 1. Check and clean *all* high amperage circuit connections - that includes the earth returns, often forgotten. 2. When you select 'start', listen for the solenoid switch to click. If it doesn't click, clean *all* the low amperage solenoid connections, including the earth returns. 3. If these don't work, get your portable multimeter out of the attic. Lift the positive terminal off the battery and check the circuit resistance through the starter motor, then through the solenoid. Both should show just a few ohms. If they don't, there's a break in the motor/solenoid circuit. If they're OK - 4. Check the resistance through the circuits from the battery terminals - with the switch made. After this, you should have narrowed the fault down to either a line break, or a high resistance joint, and you'd know whether it's in the solenoid circuit or the starter circuit. Best of luck! -- JimB http://www.jimbaerselman.f2s.com/ Describing some Greek and Spanish cruising areas 4. Check the resistance from further up the circuit - nearer the battery and trace |
boat help needed please - electical ??
News f2s wrote:
Turning the key, nothing either. The stereo turns on and plays music, but the marine radio will not. I checked all the fuses under the dash and they all seem ok. I don't know your boat, but my first checks would be: 1. Check and clean *all* high amperage circuit connections - that includes the earth returns, often forgotten. 2. When you select 'start', listen for the solenoid switch to click. If it doesn't click, clean *all* the low amperage solenoid connections, including the earth returns. 3. If these don't work, get your portable multimeter out of the attic. Lift the positive terminal off the battery and check the circuit resistance through the starter motor, then through the solenoid. Both should show just a few ohms. If they don't, there's a break in the motor/solenoid circuit. If they're OK - 4. Check the resistance through the circuits from the battery terminals - with the switch made. After this, you should have narrowed the fault down to either a line break, or a high resistance joint, and you'd know whether it's in the solenoid circuit or the starter circuit. There's one other item to check: many boats run the solenoid current through a microswitch on the gear shift that ensures that the vessel is in neutral when starting. This is especially important in a power boat with large engines! The solenoid current is actually rather high (20+ Amps?) so a voltage drop is possible. The traditional way of checking this is to put a screwdriver across the solenoid terminals, but there are obvious risks to this! (A friend did this by mistake while under his car, which promptly jumped off the jackstands and ran him over!) Another way to test might be to jumper at "ignition key" switch, where a pair of wires could be headed towards the gearshift. If this is a problem, you can use a small relay (under $10 at Radio Shack) so that only a tiny current has to make the trip through the various switches towards the starter. The small relay switches the solenoid (which is a larger relay) to run the starter. |
boat help needed please - electical ??
Jeff wrote:
Turning the key, nothing either. .... If this is a problem, you can use a small relay (under $10 at Radio Shack) so that only a tiny current has to make the trip through the various switches towards the starter. The small relay switches the solenoid (which is a larger relay) to run the starter. One more thing that might "go without saying" but I'll say anyways: if the boat has the "neutral lockout" switch, the boat must in in neutral to start! If you can look in the shift lever mechanism and you see wires there, it means there's a switch. Sometimes just jiggling the shift is enough to start the engine. |
boat help needed please - electical ??
On Tue, 11 Apr 2006 08:41:36 -0400, Jeff wrote:
Sometimes just jiggling the shift is enough to start the engine. Yes, good point. |
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