A
Anthony Bavuso
I read in an archive post a while back where someone had mentioned that a VHF radio should never be wired downstream of the battery isolation switch i.e. when the batteries are isolated, no power goes to the VHF. I did some more looking and could not find a good explanation as to why? Could someone please explain it? It would be nice when I leave the boat for the weekend to flip the isolation switch to off and not have to worry if I accidentally left the radio on and would return to a dead battery.Does it have something to do with the radio electronics? I have read most of Nigel Calder's book "Boatownwers Mechanical and Electrical manual" and I haven't found yet where he indicates not to wire the VHF to the isolation switch.Or is it something more simple like when you are out at sea in a storm and you have an electrical fire and you isolate all batteries to stop it, but now you don't have power to your VHF to call for help? But I suppose if you wired the VHF directly to the isolation switch output (with a fuse of course), you could stop the short causing the fire by opening all your breakers. You would still have power to the radio and any shorted circuit downstream of the breakers would have been removed by opening the breakers.Thanks.