My 1986 H28.5 had a cigarette lighter receptacle -- which recently failed an needs to be replaced -- for the cockpit that took power by using the hot stud on the back end of the ignition switch and a ground off the negative post of the tachometer, an arrangement I don't understand. Not sure why a PO who wired the old system up decided to take a ground off the tach stud rather than simply use the lower negative stud on the ignition switch. The fact that he did not do what appears to be the obvious is what concerns me.... On my boat, the ignition studs are "hot" as soon as the main battery switch is turned on. No switches on the main panel need to be thrown. It also makes no difference if the ignition key has been turned or not. So the only concern would seem to be whether I would be taking power away from the ignition process... or is there something else I'm missing here? Even if that were the case, I don't have the GPS on (the primary use for this receptacle) when starting the engine. Once the engine is started and the GPS is on, the generator takes care of power, not the batteries. Any thoughts?_________________PS: I plan to put an inline fuse on the hot wire when I connect the replacement up.