Downrigger Wiring

Tug

New member
I have always connected my downriggers directly to the battery,i am in the process of cleaning up and removing unneccesary connections to the batteries. I there any reason why the downrigger wiring can not be routed the to the fuse block.Thanks Tug
 
Tug, they use quite a bit of current I think. If the fuse block you're speaking of is the one you plan to put behind the helm, that's a long run from the batteries forward and back to near the stern again. I'd put a separate circuit for them directly from the batteries and fused separately from everything else.

Charlie
 
Tug":2bk6u9te said:
I have always connected my downriggers directly to the battery,i am in the process of cleaning up and removing unneccesary connections to the batteries. I there any reason why the downrigger wiring can not be routed the to the fuse block.Thanks Tug

Tug-

Do you mean connecting to the

1. main fuse coming out of the battery area, or

2. to a bus bar , or

3. to the switch panel at the helm?

Not trying to be picky, it's just that some of these terms overlap and are therefore confusing.

On Edit: Charlie beat me on this one and is right, if that's what you're intending!


Thanks! Joe. :teeth :thup
 
As i have it now. the riggers are wired directly to the battery. What i want to do is run the rigger wires back to the fuse block i have mounted behind the Port helm blockhead and use a 20-30 amp fuse.Charlie did you mean use a separate fuse for each downrigger. Tug
 
Wow, you have a port helm blockhead? My helm is mounted on the starboard side on a "bulkhead".

I wouldn't run the wiring up to the helm area. I'd put a separate fuse in for each downrigger and hook them directly to the batteries if the batteries are in the stern.

Charlie
 
Charlie..ha!ha! You are right, i will leave them as they stand, hooked up one rigger to each battery, but i have never fused any riggers i have owned and have been using them for years with a problem.As an insurance measure i will fuse them, it isn't hard to do.Tug
 
Tug,

I'd strongly recommend in-line fuses. Not having a problem for years is not equal to not needing to avoid future problems. A short through an un-fused large gauge wire can draw A LOT of current and start a fire. Fiberglass burns to the water line quite quickly. A couple of in-line fuses is cheap insurance (and now that you've posted in a public forum that you don't use any fuses on your down riggers, I doubt your insurance company will cover loss due to a fire started by this wiring :wink: ).
 
I have a bus bar in the lazerette that the downriggers are wired to. The bus bar is connected through the battery switch. There are inline blade fuses for each downrigger.
 
Roger on C Hawk is doing it correctly. You do not want unfused items, except the engine starter. Then you want to have them after the switch. Potentially with one on each battery, you could run down both batteries. What he is doing is within ABYC standards (assuming a master fuse or breaker within 7" of each battery.
 
sure good to see you posting Dr Bob, I hope each day is getting better for you. I'm keeping you both in my thoughts and prayers. George
 
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