FlyMeAway
Well-known member
- Joined
- Sep 1, 2020
- Messages
- 544
- Fluid Motion Model
- C-302 SC
- Vessel Name
- Beagle
We're thinking of putting boat monitoring (a Vesper Cortex, so we also upgrade to full AIS) on board. The Cortex has a built-in functionality for battery monitoring and any NMEA2K sensors.
I'm trying to decide how to wire the thing and would welcome input on the three options I'm considering.
Option 1: Wire directly to the "always on" engine fuse block.
Pros: Can monitor shore shore power (through charging voltage on engine battery) as well as boat position while still keeping house bank off. This could be helpful for leaving the boat at the dock over winter while still running AC loads (heaters).
Cons: Could run engine battery down accidentally. Requires a separate sensor and install to monitor voltage on house batteries; that sensor will be NMEA2K so will only work when the NMEA backbone has power. Likely a more expensive install even without second sensor (have to run new cables from helm to engine battery).
Option 2: Wire to a spare fuse behind the helm
Pros: Cheapest install. Will monitor house battery voltage directly.
Cons: Turns off when house batteries are off.
Option 3: Wire to house batteries directly
Pros: Best of options 1 and 2 above
Cons: Most expensive/complex install (I think) as it will require a new "always on" fuse block for house batteries
Also, two side questions:
1) Does Garmin output house battery voltage over NMEA2K?
2) Where is the NMEA2K backbone powered from? (on a 2018 R-31CB)
I'm trying to decide how to wire the thing and would welcome input on the three options I'm considering.
Option 1: Wire directly to the "always on" engine fuse block.
Pros: Can monitor shore shore power (through charging voltage on engine battery) as well as boat position while still keeping house bank off. This could be helpful for leaving the boat at the dock over winter while still running AC loads (heaters).
Cons: Could run engine battery down accidentally. Requires a separate sensor and install to monitor voltage on house batteries; that sensor will be NMEA2K so will only work when the NMEA backbone has power. Likely a more expensive install even without second sensor (have to run new cables from helm to engine battery).
Option 2: Wire to a spare fuse behind the helm
Pros: Cheapest install. Will monitor house battery voltage directly.
Cons: Turns off when house batteries are off.
Option 3: Wire to house batteries directly
Pros: Best of options 1 and 2 above
Cons: Most expensive/complex install (I think) as it will require a new "always on" fuse block for house batteries
Also, two side questions:
1) Does Garmin output house battery voltage over NMEA2K?
2) Where is the NMEA2K backbone powered from? (on a 2018 R-31CB)