TenMile
Well-Known Member
Had my brother make me some very cool rod holders out of some walnut hardwood from a tree on his property:
View attachment 4109
Added a new cockpit awning to keep the rain off along with a new storage cover for the flybridge. Decided to mount an 85W solar panel on the awning along with a Charge Controller to keep my house and start batteries topped off. Like one of the earlier posts, I also have an ACR so the panel ensures that both batteries are fully charged and allows me to run my fridge without having to plug the boat in...
Also added this TriMetric 2025 battery monitor. It monitors the Amps in/out to my house batteries and the overall % State of Charge based upon the juice that the solar panel pumps into the system. It's directly based upon the number of Amp Hours you set in the monitor for the size of the system batteries. Also monitors the voltage of my start battery so that I can be sure it's also well charged. This photo shows that my 85W panel (rated to produce about 4.8 Amps) basically operates at close to full capacity.
Added a second mounting station for my HDS-10 so that I can see it from the cockpit while fishing -- otherwise, while travelling it's mounted at the helm on the flybridge.
No photos of this one, but it was a cool mod. The boat slowly accumulates rainwater in the engine compartment bilge area and it totally bugs me. The level is too low for the bilge pumps to remove it, but it's about 1" deep across a long area and probably adds up to 2-3 gallons. It was a major pain climbing down into the engine compartment with a manual bilge pump to get the water out. Anyhow, I got hold of a cheap washdown/diaphragm pump and rigged it to a switch in the dash -- plumbed it so that I can turn it on, and it sucks the bilge completely dry in about 5 minutes.
All these mods are above and beyond what I needed to do to make the boat fishy (riggers, rod holders etc) and to replace all the pumps and electrical components that were neglected by the previous owner.
View attachment 4109
Added a new cockpit awning to keep the rain off along with a new storage cover for the flybridge. Decided to mount an 85W solar panel on the awning along with a Charge Controller to keep my house and start batteries topped off. Like one of the earlier posts, I also have an ACR so the panel ensures that both batteries are fully charged and allows me to run my fridge without having to plug the boat in...
Also added this TriMetric 2025 battery monitor. It monitors the Amps in/out to my house batteries and the overall % State of Charge based upon the juice that the solar panel pumps into the system. It's directly based upon the number of Amp Hours you set in the monitor for the size of the system batteries. Also monitors the voltage of my start battery so that I can be sure it's also well charged. This photo shows that my 85W panel (rated to produce about 4.8 Amps) basically operates at close to full capacity.
Added a second mounting station for my HDS-10 so that I can see it from the cockpit while fishing -- otherwise, while travelling it's mounted at the helm on the flybridge.

No photos of this one, but it was a cool mod. The boat slowly accumulates rainwater in the engine compartment bilge area and it totally bugs me. The level is too low for the bilge pumps to remove it, but it's about 1" deep across a long area and probably adds up to 2-3 gallons. It was a major pain climbing down into the engine compartment with a manual bilge pump to get the water out. Anyhow, I got hold of a cheap washdown/diaphragm pump and rigged it to a switch in the dash -- plumbed it so that I can turn it on, and it sucks the bilge completely dry in about 5 minutes.
All these mods are above and beyond what I needed to do to make the boat fishy (riggers, rod holders etc) and to replace all the pumps and electrical components that were neglected by the previous owner.