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<blockquote data-quote="krawler" data-source="post: 336257" data-attributes="member: 5928"><p>If you want to stay "all electric" a good upgrade would be to add a second group 31 battery (Walmart), a battery switch to turn on/off and change between batteries, and an on-board charger. </p><p></p><p>At first it seems expensive to add an on-board charger but the benefits outweigh the cost. You just plug in the boat when you get home, the charger will automatically charge both batteries with the correct voltage/amps which keeps them in a full charge state, making your batteries last much longer.</p></blockquote><p></p>
[QUOTE="krawler, post: 336257, member: 5928"] If you want to stay "all electric" a good upgrade would be to add a second group 31 battery (Walmart), a battery switch to turn on/off and change between batteries, and an on-board charger. At first it seems expensive to add an on-board charger but the benefits outweigh the cost. You just plug in the boat when you get home, the charger will automatically charge both batteries with the correct voltage/amps which keeps them in a full charge state, making your batteries last much longer. [/QUOTE]
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