Yeah, but what happens when you are running along, fuse blows by the battery, and the alt was excited, and the battery leaves the circuit.......ouch......If I had a fuse on my main battery line, or anywhere between my alt and my battery, it would be removed. Your ignition has a breaker on it, or it should anyway to keep the starter from being used if it is popped. Newer alternators also have protection diodes integrated into them so they correct AC current. The one you fried probably did not. Because of this the, what could possibly happen save a catastrophic failure (like a crash into another boat) that could cause the main battery line to require fusing? Everything in it is protected at the component, so there is not a need to fuse the wire. If there is a fuse on the main battery wire, it is probably huge, like 150A or something. There is no component in your electrical system that can dish out that much amperage, so whats the point of even putting it there? The highest output components you have are your alt, and your battery. Some starters pull 200A+ when turning as well. What's the point in having a fuse that large, IMO it only adds the potential to fry your alt if for some reason it does pop, which is likely never. That would equivelent to internally fusing the battery....just no point to it.
One thing you do want to do Razz is make sure the relay activate circuit (the little lugs you have to tie to the ignition) is fused. Those need to be on an acc line, or added to a breaker or something somewhere; or just add a low amp inline fuse on it.
One thing you do want to do Razz is make sure the relay activate circuit (the little lugs you have to tie to the ignition) is fused. Those need to be on an acc line, or added to a breaker or something somewhere; or just add a low amp inline fuse on it.
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