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On Sun, 24 Oct 2010 20:23:35 -0400, I am Tosk
wrote: In article , says... On Sun, 24 Oct 2010 19:14:41 -0400, I am Tosk wrote: In article , says... On Sun, 24 Oct 2010 18:30:06 -0400, I am Tosk wrote: In article , says... On Sun, 24 Oct 2010 06:34:14 -0700 (PDT), Tim wrote: On Oct 24, 8:20*am, John H wrote: On Sun, 24 Oct 2010 06:14:26 -0700 (PDT), Tim wrote: On Oct 24, 7:57*am, "Paul@BYC" wrote: A discussion about "chain rodes rip out cleats" would be on topic and possibly very funny! Probably , that is as long as it's someone else's boat. Good mornin', Tim. I'm off to get my boat. Sandy and I are going up to the Georgetown Starbucks for a cup of coffee. Have a spectacular day! -- John H All decisions are the result of binary thinking. Have fun, John.! Well, this is what I get for a fast decision to go boating. Usually I pick the boat up the night before and check the battery, etc. Today I just hooked up the boat, drove to the ramp north of the airport, launched the boat, and hit the starter.....nothing. ****!!! So, I'm back home, battery is on the charger, and we're waiting for it to get charged. Hell, even the hot shot didn't have enough juice to crank the engine. Oh well, live and learn - not to take shortcuts. I have had a few of those hot shot things, cheap and expensive, none of which has ever started anything for me... This wasn't a cheap one, that's for sure. I should have plugged it in last night. But, the gauge said it was 'ready'. Maybe it was ready for a battery at 75%, but not mine! Like I said, I have had good ones too, they just aren't worth it. Now I have twenty foot jumper cables, good soft ones. But of course they still might not reach the boat. But did you consider taking the battery out of the tow vehicle and jumping the boat? I carry jumpers and asked a guy in a new bass boat to give me a jump. He didn't know if he could, 'cause he didn't know where the battery was. Well, we found the battery and hooked up the cables. I then asked him to rev the engine up a little. He said he couldn't because the boat would start going forward. So I showed him how to take it out of gear and rev the engine. (At that point he said he should read the book!) Anyway, even with the cables connected and the engine at about 1500 rpm, mine would still not turn over. I'm tellin' ya, my battery was dead. That's D-E-A-D! Sounds like you might have a "sulfated" battery. One or more of the cells could be snookered from getting so dead. Even if is seems to take a full charge, which it might not, take it and have a cranking/charging test done on it at a local parts store before putting it back in the boat. Napa or Acme should be able to do it for free. One bad cell (sulfated) means your battery only has a bit over 10 volts to work with, most starters won't work much under that... Yeah, I'll be checking it out. It was only a few months old, and the charger did it's thing. It's reading 13.3 volts now. Today it goes to the shop for winterization, lower unit service, and shrink wrapping. The shrink wrap is dependant on whether or not I can tow it at highway speeds while wrapped. I may have to find a more local guy. -- John H All decisions are the result of binary thinking. |
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