Swedefj40
Petty Officer 1st Class
- Joined
- Jun 9, 2018
- Messages
- 204
We bought our 1996 Campion Victoria 215 last spring, which makes us the 3rd owners of it, and with the help of you fine folks here in this forum, we were able to get the bugs out of it (alt, oil sensors, balancer, etc.) and were able to enjoy it for the rest of the summer.
This winter I relocated the electronics to the upper shelf and got them off of the dash which obstructed my view, redid the trailer's brakes and fixed some tail lights issues.
So now it's on to tackling the wiring mess that previous owners have created. Check this out...
Needless to say it needs to be corrected! The plan is to replace the battery switch to a smaller "off/on/emergency combine" type and add an Argofet isolator for the charging circuit. Add a proper circuit breaker and fuse block in the engine bay and also one at the helm.
My question is this... as you can see in the last picture the battery disconnect switch is located on the transom right behind the engine. I'm thinking that if there is an electrical fire in the engine bay I'd have to reach over top of everything to get to the battery switch to power it off. Is there any reason why I can't raise the switch higher up the transom, cut a hole and install a watertight compartment into the rail above the engine cover and install the switch in that? That way I'd be able to switch batteries or shut them off without lifting the cover off. See the drawing in the picture...
So what do you think?

This winter I relocated the electronics to the upper shelf and got them off of the dash which obstructed my view, redid the trailer's brakes and fixed some tail lights issues.


So now it's on to tackling the wiring mess that previous owners have created. Check this out...

Needless to say it needs to be corrected! The plan is to replace the battery switch to a smaller "off/on/emergency combine" type and add an Argofet isolator for the charging circuit. Add a proper circuit breaker and fuse block in the engine bay and also one at the helm.
My question is this... as you can see in the last picture the battery disconnect switch is located on the transom right behind the engine. I'm thinking that if there is an electrical fire in the engine bay I'd have to reach over top of everything to get to the battery switch to power it off. Is there any reason why I can't raise the switch higher up the transom, cut a hole and install a watertight compartment into the rail above the engine cover and install the switch in that? That way I'd be able to switch batteries or shut them off without lifting the cover off. See the drawing in the picture...

So what do you think?