Jim Walsh wrote:Nice work. 1 3/4” vs 2”........you got hosed.....
You don’t say.... Clearly spring is taking a peek in New England.
And so what are your sailing plans this summer Mr. Walsh?
Moderator: Jim Walsh
Jim Walsh wrote:Nice work. 1 3/4” vs 2”........you got hosed.....
I’m scheduled for the COVID vaccine Monday....that will put me well on the way toward a run down to Bermuda......wahoo taco’s.....my nirvana.John Stone wrote:Jim Walsh wrote:Nice work. 1 3/4” vs 2”........you got hosed.....
You don’t say.... Clearly spring is taking a peek in New England.
And so what are your sailing plans this summer Mr. Walsh?
Concur. "Nothing too strong ever broke." I have read that article too. And while it makes sense to me I have a highly experienced friend who scoffs at it.Jim Walsh wrote:Nice battery boxes, nothing can ever be too strong and batteries must stay in place under the worst scenarios.
I always found this article interesting concerning the optimal orientation of flooded batteries. https://marinehowto.com/installation-or ... -on-boats/
No. Never considered them. I’m not an expert on batteries. But I am definitely a keep it simply kind of sailor. I don’t really have any measurable power demands. I just doubled my battery capacity which is way way more than I needed with my current configuration. I actually tripled it if you count the starting battery. There is just no value to the lithium’s that I can see. You’re right—3 to 4 times the cost. But I am not going to get 3-4 times the life span from them. I never had my single AGM down more than 10 amps. And, truth be told I have already over complicated my boat with an inboard, though that is a different story.gonesail wrote:Have you considered putting in Lithium LiFePO4 batteries? True they cost about 3 or 4 times as much as the Trojans which for me is too much. But they only weigh 30 lbs each which is nice. Never mind I see you already have your batteries. Sure wish I had that kind of room under my quarter birth