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Correct battery type?
Okay, I've had my first boat for a little while now. 85HP outboard
Chrysler. Came with a car 12v battery for starting, etc, but the battery is crap as it is getting old and not holding charge for long anymore.. Do you folks recommend a car 12v battery in a boat or is there something more preferred? It is used for starting, running a fish finder, and a small car stereo occasionally. Thanks |
Correct battery type?
"gprimerib" wrote in message ups.com... Okay, I've had my first boat for a little while now. 85HP outboard Chrysler. Came with a car 12v battery for starting, etc, but the battery is crap as it is getting old and not holding charge for long anymore.. Do you folks recommend a car 12v battery in a boat or is there something more preferred? It is used for starting, running a fish finder, and a small car stereo occasionally. Thanks If you have just one battery get a marine deep cycle battery rather than a starting battery. |
Correct battery type?
On Wed, 09 Aug 2006 19:23:01 -0400, gprimerib
wrote: Okay, I've had my first boat for a little while now. 85HP outboard Chrysler. Came with a car 12v battery for starting, etc, but the battery is crap as it is getting old and not holding charge for long anymore.. Do you folks recommend a car 12v battery in a boat or is there something more preferred? Get a marine battery. No question. And expect boat batteries to wear out faster than car batteries in any event. The occasional use, long periods of inactivity (even if you bring them inside over the winter, as I do), and deep cycling needed to start the motor are just plain hard work. Car batteries aren't up to it. -- Blogging from Pine View Farm--http://frankwbell.no-ip.info/weblog Updates daily. Worthwhile updates occasionally. fwb2355 is a spam trap. Email frankwbell at comcast.net Slackware (http://www.slackware.com) and Opera (http://www.opera.com): the ultimate internet experience. |
Correct battery type?
Get a marine battery.
No question. And expect boat batteries to wear out faster than car batteries in any event. The occasional use, long periods of inactivity (even if you bring them inside over the winter, as I do), and deep cycling needed to start the motor are just plain hard work. Car batteries aren't up to it. Okay, a deep cycle marine battery it is then. I'm kinda a stickler for putting unused batteries on battery tenders, especially on the toys that don't get used as often as a car. |
Correct battery type?
Sears has one with a 3year warranty unless they changed.
"gprimerib" wrote in message oups.com... Get a marine battery. No question. And expect boat batteries to wear out faster than car batteries in any event. The occasional use, long periods of inactivity (even if you bring them inside over the winter, as I do), and deep cycling needed to start the motor are just plain hard work. Car batteries aren't up to it. Okay, a deep cycle marine battery it is then. I'm kinda a stickler for putting unused batteries on battery tenders, especially on the toys that don't get used as often as a car. |
Correct battery type?
Oops, forgot to mention that they have marine batteries.
jamesgangnc wrote: I use the wally world batteries and had a chance to test that warrenty this spring. The battery I installed last year just would not get over 11 volts. Bad cell I presumed even though I don't have a specific gravity tester. Took it back and the guy checked and found the bad cell, gave me a new battery and sent me on my way. No hassles, no probs. wrote: On 9 Aug 2006 16:23:01 -0700, "gprimerib" wrote: Okay, I've had my first boat for a little while now. 85HP outboard Chrysler. Came with a car 12v battery for starting, etc, but the battery is crap as it is getting old and not holding charge for long anymore.. Do you folks recommend a car 12v battery in a boat or is there something more preferred? It is used for starting, running a fish finder, and a small car stereo occasionally. Thanks You can go the other way. If you get a car battery from Wal-Mart they will swap it out for up to 2 years for free. I think you could take one in with a bulletr hole in it and if it was less than 2 years old the girl just tells you to go get another one. |
Correct battery type?
All this stuff is junk, these pro-rated warranties are ridiculous, only
Rolls and Optima make honest batteries that really do work for years. I would guess, one deep cycle marine battery of a "normal" (car-like) size would easily start a 85 HP motor. In article . com, "jamesgangnc" wrote: Oops, forgot to mention that they have marine batteries. jamesgangnc wrote: I use the wally world batteries and had a chance to test that warrenty this spring. The battery I installed last year just would not get over 11 volts. Bad cell I presumed even though I don't have a specific gravity tester. Took it back and the guy checked and found the bad cell, gave me a new battery and sent me on my way. No hassles, no probs. wrote: On 9 Aug 2006 16:23:01 -0700, "gprimerib" wrote: Okay, I've had my first boat for a little while now. 85HP outboard Chrysler. Came with a car 12v battery for starting, etc, but the battery is crap as it is getting old and not holding charge for long anymore.. Do you folks recommend a car 12v battery in a boat or is there something more preferred? It is used for starting, running a fish finder, and a small car stereo occasionally. Thanks You can go the other way. If you get a car battery from Wal-Mart they will swap it out for up to 2 years for free. I think you could take one in with a bulletr hole in it and if it was less than 2 years old the girl just tells you to go get another one. |
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