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#1 | |
Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2010
Posts: 6,856
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Quote:
If you decide to go with another SLA go with a 12v 12a for your FF, that'll keep it going for several hours but whatever you do NEVER EVER let it go completed dead. Assuming that your bilge pump is exactly that and you are not referring to your bait tank pump as your bilge pump and you do not have a leak in your kayak that would cause the pump to run more often than not I would suggest you get a 12v 7a. However, if the bilge pump that you're talking about is your bait tank pump get a 6v 12a battery, a 12v battery isn't necessarily overkill for a bait tank pump but its definitely not necessary. If you ask around you'll find that most kayakers use 6v batteries on their bait tank pumps.
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#2 | |
donkey roper
Join Date: Apr 2009
Location: Pacific Beach
Posts: 968
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Quote:
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#3 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Jan 2012
Posts: 2,526
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7 amp ?
To run 7" ? Seriously? Try doubling it. 15 amp would be more appropriate . And you are tied into bait tank? SLA don't discharge well. Your battery is shot . Why it is reading 17 volts is not accurate . A 7" would probably consume .75 amp per hour . 15 amp would allow more than enough to run 10 hours with plenty reserve ? Even 12 hours. Also look for a marine battery capable of discharging and charging multiple times.
Last edited by TJones; 04-03-2017 at 08:20 PM. |
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#4 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Mar 2009
Posts: 2,384
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There are all kinds of issues with SLA batteries:
You can overcharge them by leaving them on a non trickle charger. You can charge them too soon in their discharge (they can develop a memory). They have a relatimely small number of recharges before they begin to lose capacity. You can drain them too far, killing cells. And they can easily discharge too fast with a short. The good news is that they are cheap. I have a garage full of them from before I switched to LifePo4 batteries. I have been using the same 2 6v batteries for at least 3 years and the same 2 12v batteries for at least 4 years. Averaging around 100 days otw per year. All of the batteries still last at least 2 7-8hr days per charge. The bad news is that they are expensive. But when you figure in the time and frustration of discovering and replacing bad batteries, it is not that bad. That said, the backlight on most FFs will vary the power requirement quite a bit. |
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#5 |
Sea Hunter
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Plastic dip your battery terminals
Home depot $10 this stuff works good
I put electric tape first then covered put as many coats as you want.
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Duke Mitchell Last edited by MITCHELL; 04-04-2017 at 05:11 AM. |
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#6 |
Sea Hunter
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I bought a box of 6 used battery at metalmart for $20
Every battery got a green light full charge
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Duke Mitchell |
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#7 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Apr 2015
Location: SD County
Posts: 360
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So do you carry a spare in case one doesn't last long enough? For that price it might be worth the extra weight to run a couple in parallel for better assurance the FF doesn't die in the middle of a fishing trip, which happened to me recently.
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