Thank you CharlzO for your feedback! Will replace that 6 with a 12v!Curious as to why they had a single 6v in there to start with. 2 of them I can see (lots of people use the Golf Cart batteries like that, a pair (or two) 6v batteries wired together). Pretty much anything in your boat, or designed for it, is going to be looking for a 12v supply, so you should definitely plan on that. Either replace that 6v with a 12, or replace it with a pair of 6vs together and wire them in series to get your 12v back. A lot of it will also depend on space available to do so.
If you have two 6V deep cycle batteries, as a house bank, wired in series for 12V, DEFINITELY stick with them. They are far superior to imposter "deep cycle" 12V batteries.....Bought a hunter 27 and I noticed that the previous owner had a 6 volt deep cycle battery and a regular cranking 12 volt. My question is, should I get a 12 volt deep cycle or stick with the 6 volt???? Forgive my ignorance![]()
Chief? What? I have house batteries in parallel. 6 volt would always be x2 in series, although you could have two groups and run them in parallel. Starting battery should alway be separate incase the house batteries run down and you need to start to get out of Dodge. What u say?Ingearnous: You are wasting your money having a seperate starter battery as your house bank will suffice for all DC requirements plus it will charge the bank while running.
I can't even imagine a 6 volt in parallel or in series on a boat! You are lucky the battery did not explode and cause serious damage! I just can't imagine anyone that dumb! Chief
Ingearnous: You are wasting your money having a seperate starter battery as your house bank will suffice for all DC requirements plus it will charge the bank while running.
I can't even imagine a 6 volt in parallel or in series on a boat! You are lucky the battery did not explode and cause serious damage! I just can't imagine anyone that dumb! Chief