Complete rewire

Bubba1235

No longer on Forums
Joined
May 25, 2008
Messages
588
I have a trailer thats around 25 years old. Stripped it, primed and painted, looks good. I am tossing all the old lights, wiring etc. so I have been looking at what I want to install and have to admit the LED based lights seem to have a lot of advantages but I seen nothing anywhere about dunking them in water for extened periods.

Anyone know?
 

triumphrick

Lieutenant Commander
Joined
Jun 26, 2008
Messages
1,737
Re: Complete rewire

Ummmmmmm, like overnight?

LED lights work great as a boat trailer light. Usually last much longer than bulbs. However almost all light housings have to be submerged for a short period of time while launching / retrieving and that will always have an effect on their operation.

I have used LED lights for both of my last two trailers and was very satisfied.
 

cribber

Lieutenant
Joined
May 29, 2008
Messages
1,338
Re: Complete rewire

As long as the LED lights are sealed or water resistant (marine grade), they should be good to go. They draw less power and are less susceptible to vibration failure and last longer. I'd say upgrade... I'll never use incandescents again.
 

tcindie

Petty Officer 3rd Class
Joined
Jul 31, 2008
Messages
76
Re: Complete rewire

LEDs have an average life of 10,000+ hours and are sealed by design. If you're concerned about submerging them you could encase them in resin or something similar... They use an extremely low amount of power versus incandescent bulbs, are incredibly bright, and produce virtually no heat.
 

Lou C

Supreme Mariner
Joined
Nov 10, 2002
Messages
14,045
Re: Complete rewire

I boat in salt water and the way I keep my lights working is to smear OMC triple guard grease on all the bulb terminals (the lights are the bell jar design). I looked into LEDs but if salt water gets in they will not work and you can't take it apart to fix it so you have to toss it. The other thing that can really help is running a ground wire to each lamp mount point so that corrosion in the trailer frame does not cause grounding problems.
 

CATransplant

Admiral
Joined
Feb 26, 2005
Messages
6,319
Re: Complete rewire

It probably doesn't need saying, but, if your wiring goes through the frame, be sure to leave the old wiring in place so you can use it to pull the new wires. I made that mistake once. Never again.
 
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