Archive for the ‘Circuit Breakers’ Category
Boat Wiring Wizard?
Kevin,
I could really use some of your wiring wizardry.
I have have a 2009 Centurion Avalanche. I put it up for winter and everything was working fine. I charged and installed the boat batteries after winter. All of the switches work, horn, stereo, pump, etc. I go to bump the key and I get nothing. The boat is still on the trailer and before I drag it to the lake I wanted to ensure that power was getting to the starter.
I made sure that the batteries are fully charged, boat battery switch is in the on position, emergency kill switch is in place, boat is in neutral…and I get nothing when I bump the key. I pulled the fuse behind the ignition switch and it looked fine.
The boat has dual batteries. The boat dealer added an marine battery switch last year as the batteries were draining even though the battery switch was turned to the off position.
The boat on has forty hours on it. After working in a confined space and pulling my hair out, I could use some expert advice.
Thanks,
Tommy
Hi Tommy,
If the instruments have power when you turn on the key, then I would check the neutral safety switch. Based on Standard Boat Wiring Colors, follow the yellow/red wire from the starter post on the key switch to the neutral safety switch in the shifter control.
If the key switch has no power, I would check the breaker on the engine that feeds power to the ignition.
If you use a voltmeter or a test light, you will be able to find the problem. It may be something as simple as wiggle the shifter a little or replacing the starter solenoid.
Hope this helps,
Kevin
Kevin,
I’m in the boat now with even less hair.
The ignition in the on position does nothing as well as the start position.
It appears that power isn’t getting to the switch. The fuse leading up to the switch looks good. I have also been playing with the shift lever to find the sweet spot, no luck.
Trying to locate the breaker on the engine.
Thanks for all of your advice, hopefully I can get on the lake today.
Tommy
Kevin,
You the man!!! It was the engine breaker.
Tommy
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Shocking Shifter
Kevin,
I have a 1987 Sea Ray Sorrento S-19 with a 4.3 Liter OMC Stern Drive - with less than 400 hours on the motor.
I just put the boat in the water this weekend – and experienced a slight electrical shock when touching the shifter handle after starting the engine. Given that they are slight shocks I am thinking it may be the ignition switch.
I’ve looked at the boat’s wiring as much as I could see and didn’t see anything that would suggest a short. It all looked in good shape. I also reconnected the boat battery wiring and that didnt work.
Fuses? Ignition switch? Any thoughts?!
Thank you!
Larry
Hi Larry,
It is probably not your boat’s ignition switch.
The starter circuit goes through the shifter, but not the ignition. Since your problem is still occurring after the engine has started, I would look at connections on the engine.
Your boat motor has a shift interrupter circuit that basically connects your ignition coil to the shift cable. When operating properly, the shift interrupter will momentarily ground the coil during shifting. When not functioning properly, crazy things happen.
The shift interrupter should be on the starboard side of the engine and will have a shift cable connected to it. Chase the wiring from the negative side of the ignition coil to the interrupter to find your problem.
Good luck,
Kevin
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Four Winns Wiring
Hello Kevin,
I have a 1989 Four Winns Liberator 201 with a 350 OMC motor. I pulled the boat out of winterization today and wanted to check everything before I put the boat in the water.
When I went to hit the boat horn to test it, the horn sounded weak and eventually faded and did not work.
Next the navigation lights would not turn on. But when I hit the horn, the lights will turn on until the horn is released then they go off. Not sure if it could be a bad ground or short in the wiring.
I removed the access cover and found someone has cut and spliced wires on the boat before. There are also some wires disconnected and zip tied up and others just cut.
The boat blower motor did work when starting the boat but now it also will not turn on. I’m not an expert in marine electrical by any means but would like to find the issue my self. I have a voltmeter but never used it other than checking glow plug relays on diesel engines. I have used a test light on trailers – checking for power and such so I do have a little knowledge but not where to start on this project.
Any help would be great.
Thanks
Mark
Hi Mark,
I’m a HUGE Liberator fan. I worked at Four Winns during the era after their production.
There are few marine wiring items to check since several things have quit working.
- Main engine plug – round plug 1 1/4″ diameter on the starboard side of the engine. Unplug and check terminals
- Boat harness ground – check ground connection on rear bell housing of the engine
- Helm fuse block – check ground and power leads on the main fuse block under the helm
Once your find the corroded connection, replace as necessary.
Good luck,
Kevin
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