electric panel refit
Several people have done this to their 37c, this site has a lot of good information.
I've mostly completed my project. I went with :
-Blue Seas 8408 panel - 6 AC 15 DC switches
-Blue Seas 5511e 350 amp battery switch ( 2 simultaneous circuits, one for engine, one for house panel.
-Xantrex Linklite batter monitor
-Wema tank monitors ( drop-in replacement for my 1983 tanks + monitor )
-Xantrex Freedom 1800W inverter ( will take a spike to 3500W )
-teak plywood and a Dremel tool to shape it
-4 290 series flooded deep cycle batteries, 400 Ah total
-1 cranking battery
-Xantrex echo charger
-Balmar 60 series 100amp alternator, charges house bank, connected echo charger charges the engine battery
-Balmar ARS-5 regulator
-200 amp fuse on pos+ for inverter ( 2400 watts protection )
-100 amp fuse on pos+ from alternator to batteries to protect the alt )
-negative bus bar, from batteries, grounded to engine. All neg-loads on 1 side, ground on the other, and shunt connected to Blue seas panel
-New wire for all the charging gear and batteries
-voltage and amp sensors connected to blue Seas Panel from batteries and shunts
-lots of expensive tinned wire, shrink tubing, ring terminals, lock washers, a label maker....
Nigel Calder's BoatOwners Mechanical And Electrical Manual. This is the book you want, to study lightning protection, wire sizing etc.
It's been a real adventure, and I've learned a ton of stuff. Dont forget to label every wire you touch. Note also that my choices of gear, and design of the electrical system were my own, based on my own requirements, and may not work for you. Take your time, draw it out, answer all your concerns about grounding, circuit design, loads etc, and don't skimp on wire size, or safety components like pos+ battery wire covers. DC amperage is dangerous if you ground yourself.
The one thing I want to add next year, is an isolator on the shore-side power, to reduce the burn rate on my magnesium anode, which I replace every season. ( note - if your in fresh water, you should have magnesium or aluminum. Zinc is useless ).
This spring I cut the nav-desk top in two, about 6 inches from the right-side. On that 6-inch piece I mounted a 110AC GFCI outlet for the PC and TV. Varnished and shiny, it looks really nice. ( I also made a small secret drawer underneath. Shh its a secret... )
This summer when I'm in the North Channel for 3 weeks, and I need to charge the batteries, I'll start up the engine, rev to about 1,200 RPM, watch the DC meter show a 60+ Amp charge, See the Xantrex Linklite show the batteries are filling up. Then my wife and I will take a shower, and let the amps flow. Its going to be a great vacation!