Irishwolf
Crew Member
With cold winters and concrete floors known to kill batteries, I wonder what others do to keep their batteries from dying a slow and painful death over the winter. Do you pull them out and leave in your garage on wood, do you keep them on a charger, do you close your eyes and hope for the best come spring?
Something else?
For me I keep it on a trickle charge, in the boat, under a boat cover, in the driveway. I have a 14 foot Lund. I built a battery box (fuse panel/posts at the back left side) wired to the battery I built into the front bench. Battery powers my electric start motor, 2 riggers, GPS/FF and manual bilge. I also built a charging port off the battery box to charge the battery without having to pull the battery out. I do not have a battery shut off. Just no room for one. I can pull off the main line to the battery box, but I'm worried this will corrode the wires as I found happened with an old VW Golf I had sitting in my driveway for over a year. I know marine grad wires are built beefier than automotive, but just curious if this practice is ok or am I opening myself up to potential issues?
This setup worked well for me last winter, kinda feel like it keeps the system warm and ready to go, so if a warm day approached, I can simply unplug and go.
Cheers.

For me I keep it on a trickle charge, in the boat, under a boat cover, in the driveway. I have a 14 foot Lund. I built a battery box (fuse panel/posts at the back left side) wired to the battery I built into the front bench. Battery powers my electric start motor, 2 riggers, GPS/FF and manual bilge. I also built a charging port off the battery box to charge the battery without having to pull the battery out. I do not have a battery shut off. Just no room for one. I can pull off the main line to the battery box, but I'm worried this will corrode the wires as I found happened with an old VW Golf I had sitting in my driveway for over a year. I know marine grad wires are built beefier than automotive, but just curious if this practice is ok or am I opening myself up to potential issues?
This setup worked well for me last winter, kinda feel like it keeps the system warm and ready to go, so if a warm day approached, I can simply unplug and go.
Cheers.