Seaswirl89
Seaman Apprentice
- Joined
- May 17, 2021
- Messages
- 35
I recently bought a 89’ seaswirl with a 4.3 OMC engine. Boat came with two batteries but only one battery was hooked up to the boat, seller said second one was for just in case.
I thought that’s great but how does that just in case battery stay charged? The just in case battery looks to be from 2012 so it may not even be good anymore
I’ve done a lot of research over the past few days but there’s some many different way to do a two battery setup. I’m looking for the simplest approach because I have very limited electrical systems knownledge and would prefer not to damage my batteries, the wiring, the alternator, etc. Simplest approach I can think of is leaving the setup as is, buying a trickle charger from Amazon to charge the extra battery 1-2 times a month and keep a Halo jumper pack on the boat in case both batteries are ever dead.
What’s the most straight forward, inexpensive approach to having a backup battery on the boat?
I thought that’s great but how does that just in case battery stay charged? The just in case battery looks to be from 2012 so it may not even be good anymore
I’ve done a lot of research over the past few days but there’s some many different way to do a two battery setup. I’m looking for the simplest approach because I have very limited electrical systems knownledge and would prefer not to damage my batteries, the wiring, the alternator, etc. Simplest approach I can think of is leaving the setup as is, buying a trickle charger from Amazon to charge the extra battery 1-2 times a month and keep a Halo jumper pack on the boat in case both batteries are ever dead.
What’s the most straight forward, inexpensive approach to having a backup battery on the boat?