Yep. Works good too. Whip antennas work too. Like Bill, I have a fish tape which I use.
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Thanks for the reply jimp,
I am currently running my tm with the oem wires (don't want to limit time on the water). I saw somewhere on here that a #55 terrova does not pull more than 30 amps till you get to setting 9. But, since I measured about a 40 foot run round trip to the battery, there is more than the 1 volt drop everyone seems to use as a guide. Pulling one wire and all that goes away and the battery should last longer.
The way you described how you ran your wire under the floor makes me think you ran it through the bilge which in my boat is not a particularly dry area. Am I thinking incorrectly? That would definitely cut down on the length of the run.
<<Unlike marriage, wire separation is good.>>
That is pure gold!
I'm using it tonight to score some points.:highfive
Thanks BB, I have fished through walls before but the double 90° angle has me stumped. Your post gave me a thought though, If I poked a hooked end fish tape through the hole in the wall behind the seat, I bet I could blind catch it with another hooked end reaching over behind the gas tank. (The river is still too high to fish right now anyway.)
I agree that it is probably only an issue at higher speeds. Unfortunatley for my TM, I fish in the narrow part of the TN river valley gorge part of Nickajack and there are several spots that I would really like to park against a fairly swift current (which this TM does really well) without warming the wires.
I decided to just run the wire through its own channel. Instead of trying to fish it through the blind turns that must have been wired before they installed the gas tank, I cut a hole through the foam beside the battery and met it with a hole along the starboard side under the fake wall. I then ran conduit behind that wall to the front compartment. Ended with pulling the 6ga wire and an extra pull string. I would not say it was easy, but it was doable.
I will post pics if anyone is interested.
The above thought of running the trolling motor on one 6ga leg and one 8ga leg seems counterproductive. If I were going to use just 8ga wire for the trolling motor, I could have just left it alone. This way I one leg at 6ga and the other at double 8ga (which I believe equals a 5ga) so I should be easily below the 1 volt drop.
Yes, there is the possiblity of water being close to the wires, but remember, you're on the water. Just be careful and not nick the wire insulation or you could use some wire wrap to protect the wire in that area from any chaffing, etc. There are some sharp edges in there, and that's why I used the wire wrap in the area under the seat and livewell areas.