Augoose
Lieutenant Junior Grade
- Joined
- Mar 21, 2010
- Messages
- 1,223
Just thought I'd share....
I picked up a new Field and Stream Eagle Talon 12 fishing kayak. Quite a bit easier to hit the cove for a quick evening of fishing than launching the boat. I installed a Lowrance fish finder which has a .75A draw along with two 12" LED strip lights to serve as navigation lights. The lights draw .12A, so the grand total is .87A of draw. Both of course are 12v.
Instead of using a small 12v marine battery because space on a kayak is important, I decided to use two Ryobi 12V lithium drill batteries which I had lying around. They are super small and extremely light so I made a waterproof connector for my devices and velcro'd the batteries inside the dry storage area of the kayak. I still had the charging base for tbe batteries too which is super convenient. Each battery has a capacity of 2A, so I "should" be able to run both the fish finder and lights at the same time for about two hours if I use one battery, and if I use two I'm good for up to four hours or more. I wired the nav lights to a waterproof switch as well.
Went for a paddle this evening and although I didn't catch anything, both systems worked perfectly.
Anyone else ever used a drill battery for something like this?
I picked up a new Field and Stream Eagle Talon 12 fishing kayak. Quite a bit easier to hit the cove for a quick evening of fishing than launching the boat. I installed a Lowrance fish finder which has a .75A draw along with two 12" LED strip lights to serve as navigation lights. The lights draw .12A, so the grand total is .87A of draw. Both of course are 12v.
Instead of using a small 12v marine battery because space on a kayak is important, I decided to use two Ryobi 12V lithium drill batteries which I had lying around. They are super small and extremely light so I made a waterproof connector for my devices and velcro'd the batteries inside the dry storage area of the kayak. I still had the charging base for tbe batteries too which is super convenient. Each battery has a capacity of 2A, so I "should" be able to run both the fish finder and lights at the same time for about two hours if I use one battery, and if I use two I'm good for up to four hours or more. I wired the nav lights to a waterproof switch as well.
Went for a paddle this evening and although I didn't catch anything, both systems worked perfectly.
Anyone else ever used a drill battery for something like this?