Well guys, another day another issue! A bad one this time I think. First, some words for
@Drycreek regarding the boat choice. My neighbor has a small aluminum boat. Before I ordered my boat (raft with a frame), I helped him with his boat. We used it along with a bunch of friends and kayaks on the RIvanna river. We were putting the boats and kayaks in on private property with no ramp and a steep bank. It took 4 of us to get his boat in and out. A single person could handle a kayak (with nothing in it but a paddle). His boat was great on the water when I used it. The river was high, but we did get stuck in a few spots and had to get out and drag it over the rocks. Fishing from his boat was fine.
I wanted to be able to handle the boat myself with no help, so next I tried a kayak. It was way too hard on my back with my legs in that position. It was very tough to both control and fish from on a river. So, I was lookin for a couple things in a boat. I wanted to be able to launch it myself, so it had to be light. I can put my boat on the cart I made and move it around myself. I can launch it myself without a ramp if needed, just using the cart. The other thing I was looking for is a shallow draft. It has a very shallow draft. I can adjust the depth of the trolling motor so it is just below the water and make the boat go. It loses some power in that configuration, but I can do it when necessary. It operates best about 1' deep.
As for stability, and safety, I would rate it above my friends aluminum boat on both accounts. It is definitely more stable. I don't really see any safety issue. It has 4 chambers so even if there is a puncture, it won't sink. I will admit it is tight with all the electronics and fishing gear, but I chose to sacrifice room for lightness. The biggest area where the aluminum boat seemed to have an advantage was wind profile. This raft catches a lot of wind.
You guys are right about things going wrong. These electronics are amazing but complicated. It looks like I might already have an issue with the Megalive 2 sensor. Right now, I only have 2 things on my boat network, the Xplore and the Megalive 2. So, the Megalive 2 was plugged directly into the Xplore. Everything was working well.
I'm lusting after a Kayak Terrova trolling motor. It is electric steer, has spot-lock, integrates with my Xplore for advanced navigation, and is lighter with a smaller mounting bracket. Once you get beyond two items, they connect to each other via an ethernet switch. So, in preparation for a future Terrova, I decided to get the ethernet switch and just put it between the Xplore and Megalive 2 to test out the concept.
So, this morning after the new battery box was complete, I did a quick test. I plugged both the Xplore and Megalive 2 into the new battery box and turned on the switch for the Megalive 2 after plugging them both into the ethernet switch and plugging it into the battery box and turning that switch on. With everything plugged in, I powered on the Xplore. After it booted, the first thing I noticed there was no image from the megalive 2. It was just blank. Next I noticed there was no light about the Megalive 2 port on the ethernet switch which seemed odd.
I though perhaps the issue was the Megalive 2 transducer was out of the water, so I decided to test it out fishing. The same issue occurred on the water. After a bit, I did get a message from the Xplore that it lost sonar data from the Megalive 2. My first thought was that perhaps I did not understand the concept of how multiple devices connect. So, I decided to go back to my original configuration. I powered everything down. I disconnected both the Xplore and Megalive 2 from the ethernet switch and connected them to each other. I powered everything back up, that had no effect. My next thought was that I screwed up something wiring the new battery box and perhaps the Megalive 2 had no power. So, I swapped it to the charging port. That port has no switch inline. I got the same result
I tried powering everything up and down a couple times throughout the day. Still now luck with the Megalive 2. I decided to give up and test out some other features of the Xplore. This was the first day I put the boat on this lake. One of the things I noticed when I was fishing the other lake was that the navigation SD card that came with the unit had no bathymetry for the lake. I'm guessing the lake was too small for them to bother with. The Xplore has a feature called autochart live. It maps the lake for you as you go. So, I spent some time driving around looking at the side and down imaging and mapping the lake. I find it much harder to figure out fish without the Megalive 2. The previous MO was to use side imaging to find candidate fish and then point the Megalive 2 in that direction to confirm they were fish and the approximate size. I had no success stopping and fishing for what I thought were fish using the side and down imaging. I ended up just mapping the lake and trolling a crappie jig. I did catch a couple little crappie, but that was it.
So, when I got home, I took out the volt meter and verified I had good voltage coming out of every port on the battery box. Right now, based on the ethernet light not going on, I'm thinking my new Megalive 2 has failed. I'll be checking with Himminbird on it. When I get a chance, I'll take some pics of the finished battery box.