Wing Mark
Well-Known Member
A lot of the problems with cables and idents and all that, stem from the yotty tradition of cramming every wire into a small hole behind the chart table.
My, new to me, boat is pretty basic, there are nav lights, cabin lights, instruments, autopilot.
I want to add some solar charging, maybe a fixed mains charger. In time, a few things like pumped water.
I'm going to put some USB chargers in the aft cabin. Not at the chart table.
The heater doesn't need to be controlled from the chart table.
It's much quicker to fault-find a switch panel with 8 switches than one with 16, so splitting everything in half should make life easier?
I've used domestic square trunking to protect the wiring where it's vulnerable in lockers.
I sometimes use coloured heatshrink to distinguish wires, a short length of blue labelling a red wire at each end for example.
I worked with a bloke who sometimes used knots to identify wires. So you'd have 'Red' and '(k)Not Red'.... Drove everyone round the bend.
The key principle is do it right so it doesn't break, then you never have to fault find.
My, new to me, boat is pretty basic, there are nav lights, cabin lights, instruments, autopilot.
I want to add some solar charging, maybe a fixed mains charger. In time, a few things like pumped water.
I'm going to put some USB chargers in the aft cabin. Not at the chart table.
The heater doesn't need to be controlled from the chart table.
It's much quicker to fault-find a switch panel with 8 switches than one with 16, so splitting everything in half should make life easier?
I've used domestic square trunking to protect the wiring where it's vulnerable in lockers.
I sometimes use coloured heatshrink to distinguish wires, a short length of blue labelling a red wire at each end for example.
I worked with a bloke who sometimes used knots to identify wires. So you'd have 'Red' and '(k)Not Red'.... Drove everyone round the bend.
The key principle is do it right so it doesn't break, then you never have to fault find.