Electrical Panel Upgrade (Hunter 34)

Jan 22, 2008
1,666
Hunter 34 Alameda CA
The electrical panel on the 83-87 Hunter 34 is rather spartan. Other than the usual circuit breakers for both AC and DC there is no provision for monitoring usage or having accessory power sources. There is room on either side of the stock panel for some extra home made additions that I had made some rudimentary attempts to utilize in the past. Most recently I upgraded again and think I've finally got what I need.

On the DC side (left side of the panel), I installed a new Balmer Smart Gauge to complement my 4 x 6 volt house battery bank. Now I can monitor voltage on both the house and engine start (single Group 27) batteries. It also self calibrates and reads out the State of Charge of the house bank which gives me insight into my rate of consumption or recharge. I'm already seeing that the 35 amp stock alternator doesn't do much in recharging my batteries. I knew it didn't but not with any degree of accuracy. Thanks Mainsail for doing all the research on this device. I purchased it on an Active Captain special price at Defender a couple of months ago. I also used an old analog DC Ammeter I've had forever that has an internal shunt, so wiring it in series with the panel feed was easy. I could really see the reduction in draw as I swapped my incandescent light bulbs out for LEDs. The last big improvement was to buy a power accessory from the auto parts store that had 2 12V DC power receptacles and 2 USB ports. I took it apart and drilled my aluminum plate out to accept them. Very convenient.

On the AC side I installed a combination digital voltmeter/ammeter that I bought on Amazon. That was easy to wire as it uses a sense coil for current that I slipped over the AC main wire as it attaches to the circuit breaker. I monitor voltage on the input of the circuit breaker so I can see right away if the shore power is on even if my main is off. Nice to see the current draw of the water heater, microwave and space heater (the big ticket items). We've always been careful of what breakers to turn off before using those various devices (never in combination) just so we don't run the risk of overheating wiring if the breaker should not trip. I also added a GFCI outlet at the nav station in that new panel. It was always a pain to drape a power cord clear back (or really forward) half way down the cabin to the nearest 110V receptacle to use some accessory. Since this model Hunter had no GFCI receptacles at all, it is a nice addition. The port AC breaker had two black wires sharing the output terminal: one went aft to a single receptacle in the rear stateroom, the other went forward to service receptacles in the main salon, vanity and forward v-berth areas. In the new setup, I ran a single wire off the breaker to the Line feed input of the GFCI. Then I took the existing cable that went aft and attached it to the Load side of the GFCI. I then took a new piece of 14/2 with ground and came back from the aft receptacle and connected it to the previous run going forward. Now that GFCI at the nav table protects the entire port side of the boat. Much safer. I still have to install another GFCI on the starboard galley receptacle to protect that side (next week).

Its nice to monitor usage and tidy up a bit with extraneous cords for laptops, cell phones and the like. And I like the security of the GFCI (long overdue).
 

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Sep 4, 2007
776
Hunter 33.5 Elbow, Saskatchwen, Can.
Very nice Allen.
This is something that I'm looking into as well. I still have the stock panel but many of the led's are burnt out.
I had to install the GFCI's before my insurance company would insure me.
 
Jun 21, 2007
2,117
Hunter Cherubini 36_80-82 Sausalito / San Francisco Bay
Allan: Great upgrades. And the final appearance looks fantastic. All blends beautifully with the original. Thanks for posting. Might provide some inspiration to me.

Amazing the difference in Hunter's electrical panels between my 1980 constructed boat and your 1983-87 model.

Here's a picture of mine. Although certainly dated, I am rather fond of the simulated wood-grain formica!

The only battery monitoring "feature" I have is my digital multimeter which I keep in the nav desk. Always plugged into my boat's cigarette lighter socket is the charging plug for my hand-held VHF radio. Easy to turn on the cigarette socket breaker switch and touch the multimeter's leads to the end-plug to read the voltage on my two group 27 dual purpose batteries. Mainly this method only confirms that my 20w solar panel and charge controller are keeping my batteries topped-up between visits. And that when I start the engine, I can see just north of 14v which confirms that my 35 year old alternator still can do its charging thing.

I have certainly contemplated hard-wiring a more permanent and more thorough battery monitoring arrangement as you now have.

Wonder if I can find some matching wood grain formica to mount the upgrade on?
 
Oct 14, 2005
2,191
1983 Hunter H34 North East, MD
Allan...

I'm impressed. Very well done.

I have a much simpler set-up using analog meters, and added an aux panel above and to the left side of the main panel using a "standard" six breaker panel as found in the WM catalog. See pix

There are GFI outlets on each side of the cabin protecting the outllets after. There is a 12 volt cigarette plug outlet on the side of the companionway cubby, easily reache from the cockpit for power protected by one of the breakers on the aux panel.
 

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Nov 6, 2006
10,093
Hunter 34 Mandeville Louisiana
Great looking, Allan.. I like the GFI installation.. Have not done that yet on mine but it is a good thing to retrofit.