Boden Boat Plans Australia
This is the first weekend Ive been able to get in to the boat yard now that theyre back on summer hours, and I feel like Im starting to get somewhere. I got a fair amount accomplished this weekend, and am almost at the point in the wheel house where my attentions can move elsewhere.

The next order of business was to install the door that houses the electrical distribution panel and the panel itself. I built the door large enough to be able to add sub panels or another panel below the main panel. The door is my basic style and rail door using a 1/4" cherry plywood panel, and cutting all the parts on my wood shaper.
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The panel is built for two AC shore power sources having two AC busss. The panel also can be fed via our generator or an inverter along with the DC source. Because of wanting to feed one buss with inverter loads, and only having one shore power cord, I used some jumper wires on my load terminal strip to hot three circuits using two breakers. I have all the lights hot, all my receptacles, and my air compressor. The jumper wires are no big deal and are a common method, but I am pretty sure ABYC allows for no more than four wires per terminal. Its big time sweet being able to see ( via the panel gauges) how much voltage is coming aboard, and how many amps are being used.
Now that the panel is at the point that it can be used and easily finished as the project develops, I decided now was the time to get some more heavy work finished with pulling the battery cables from the engine room to the wheel house. The 12 volt house bank sits in the engine room and with the DC panel in the wheel house, a heavy cable was needed. Over the summer I had purchased two 100 rolls of 2/00 cable. Buying 200 of seems like a lot, but I still have to fabricate the leads for the three battery banks, land the starter cables.
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Since I was in the cable pulling mood, I went ahead and pulled the cables from the wheel house to the engine room for the main engine and the generator. I use a 9/12 UF ( nine conductors, 12 gauge, direct bury) wire for work often, and I have quite a bit of scrap lengths at the shop, so thats the wire that got used for this job. The main engine uses 10 wires, so I taped a red 10 gauge wire to the 9/12 for the battery conductor on the main engine. The generator only needs seven wires, but since the 9/12 is 12 gauge wire, and I wanted a 10 gauge for that battery line, more red # 10 got taped to this conductor too. Wanting to be able to stay on task, I landed those two conductors on terminal strips under the instrument panel so once I run down a few more parts, connecting the main engine panel and the generator panel will be quick and easy. Using terminal strips in this way will also make adding another helm for a possible future fly bridge will be more easy.
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The wheel house is starting to look good, and I can see the day soon approaching when I can jump back in the salon and start sheathing. This nice bit of wheel house work I did this weekend found me burning through 50 - #10-12 heat shrink forked terminal ends like it was nothing. So before I can really call it a done deal, Im going to have to source some more parts. Im going to look at it a hard this week, but I do believe I can now install the counter top and get some color and finish on the last bit of wood.
Cheers

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