I plan on building a permanant shack and want to make it as light as I can so it can be easily moved. It will be on skids. My plan is to make the floor out of 2x4 and plywood. 2x2 wall studs and maybe roof. I plan to use vinyl roofing panels for siding and the roof with the white styrafoam insulation. No plywood on walls. House will be about 5x6 or maybe slightly larger. Is this house going to blow away? It needs to be able to be completely moved by a female. (not that I'm saying anything about females here), but the current house she has is to heavy for her too place on blocks and move from blocks.
I just figured that it is easy enough to just get a 3 bank so when the boat is not in use I can keep all 3 batteries charged. I have not bough a charger yet, maybe I will give it some more thought.
Edit: After thinking this over, with the size, weight, and heat output of the charger (as well as the cost) I think it makes sense to just
buy a 2 bank charger, I have a smaller charger i can use on the starting battery when the boat is sitting at home. Forgive me, for i am a retired engineer and I have to obsess over everything...
Congrats on the motor! I think you’ll like it.
I can’t say much on the charger location but I’ve seen them under the lid in back compartments and under center rod lockers. 160 degrees is more than I expected to hear.
Curious why you’re opting for a 3 bank charger with a 24V trolling motor. Unless you don’t feel you be running you big motor enough to keep that battery up as well?
I did buy an Minnkota Ulterra, thanks for the recommendations. I had a bunch of Cabela"s bucks saved up, which helped. Now i need to
get an onboard battery charger. Where do you guys mount these things in your boat? The manufacturer I am looking at {Noco genius)
says tht their 3-bank charger will run at 160 degrees, seems like a lot of heat in an enclosed compartment? Thanks for any input on this.
Wasn't terrible at a state park beach. Antelope island maybe. I wouldn't recommend it as a beach destination tho. Figured I was there, I'm getting in it.
Question
Gus
I plan on building a permanant shack and want to make it as light as I can so it can be easily moved. It will be on skids. My plan is to make the floor out of 2x4 and plywood. 2x2 wall studs and maybe roof. I plan to use vinyl roofing panels for siding and the roof with the white styrafoam insulation. No plywood on walls. House will be about 5x6 or maybe slightly larger. Is this house going to blow away? It needs to be able to be completely moved by a female. (not that I'm saying anything about females here), but the current house she has is to heavy for her too place on blocks and move from blocks.
Thanks for advise.
Link to comment
Share on other sites
13 answers to this question
Recommended Posts