waternutt
Jetboaters Lieutenant
- Messages
- 221
- Reaction score
- 189
- Points
- 157
- Location
- Panama City, FL
- Boat Make
- Chaparral
- Year
- 2016
- Boat Model
- VR
- Boat Length
- 24
I am not the smartest when it comes to wiring diagrams and electrical systems, so I am hoping someone might be able to assist. This also ties into another question here in the Chaparral forums inquiring about start and house batteries. I am just trying to get a better understanding of the boat's electrical system.
I recently replaced the batteries in my 2016 243VR. It has dual temp/voltage gauges on the console. Before I pulled the old batteries, I was getting a "Starboard Low Voltage" warning on the display. However, it was the left gauge (port) that was showing low. I figured perhaps the wires got crossed to the gauges on installation and I just never noticed.
Moving on to new battery installation...I initially installed the starboard battery. With just the starboard battery connected, it appeared to have no electrical power to the boat (no blower, display, or gauges) with the battery switch both in ON and COMBINE. So I then disconnected the starboard, connected the port battery and placed the battery switch in ON. I now had some power (blower, display) and the right (starboard) gauge was the one to come alive. I attempted to start the engines but got nothing.
Following my earlier suspicion of crossed wiring to the gauges, I swapped the wiring to the two gauges and tried again. Blower, display, and the same starboard gauge came alive. Now this is where I got confused, so I just swapped the wiring to the gauges back, re-installed the starboard battery, checked that engines would start, and plugged in the smart charger to top off the batteries.
I still need to attempt digging into the wiring diagrams, but a few question come to mind.
1. Why did the same temp/voltage gauge come alive despite swapping the connections?
2. Why was there no power to the boat with just the starboard battery connected?
3. Why would neither engine start with just the port battery connected?
4. Do these boats have a dedicated start and house battery?
I understand this is a lot to unfold, but I would appreciate any insight anyone may have. Thanks.
I recently replaced the batteries in my 2016 243VR. It has dual temp/voltage gauges on the console. Before I pulled the old batteries, I was getting a "Starboard Low Voltage" warning on the display. However, it was the left gauge (port) that was showing low. I figured perhaps the wires got crossed to the gauges on installation and I just never noticed.
Moving on to new battery installation...I initially installed the starboard battery. With just the starboard battery connected, it appeared to have no electrical power to the boat (no blower, display, or gauges) with the battery switch both in ON and COMBINE. So I then disconnected the starboard, connected the port battery and placed the battery switch in ON. I now had some power (blower, display) and the right (starboard) gauge was the one to come alive. I attempted to start the engines but got nothing.
Following my earlier suspicion of crossed wiring to the gauges, I swapped the wiring to the two gauges and tried again. Blower, display, and the same starboard gauge came alive. Now this is where I got confused, so I just swapped the wiring to the gauges back, re-installed the starboard battery, checked that engines would start, and plugged in the smart charger to top off the batteries.
I still need to attempt digging into the wiring diagrams, but a few question come to mind.
1. Why did the same temp/voltage gauge come alive despite swapping the connections?
2. Why was there no power to the boat with just the starboard battery connected?
3. Why would neither engine start with just the port battery connected?
4. Do these boats have a dedicated start and house battery?
I understand this is a lot to unfold, but I would appreciate any insight anyone may have. Thanks.