I see it all the time and I know its me. But do those pods not look like they are just going to snap off? I have a 3' pod on my hourston 20 and I feel the same.
If I just want to read the engine data on my Simrad Go, do I need a complete backbone? Or is a direct nmea200 cable from the engine to the simrad enough?
If I just want to read the engine data on my Simrad Go, do I need a complete backbone? Or is a direct nmea200 cable from the engine to the simrad enough? Please answer
"I got to fish a wire up through the rigging, so thatll be fun" lmao...i wish i had that level of sarcasm
always a ton of fun pulling wires
Great video - you showed everything I needed to know - thank you so much :)
@@alanlee1408 glad I could help! Love comments like this one
Good job there bub
Thanks!
How did you get that white dashboard?
I see it all the time and I know its me. But do those pods not look like they are just going to snap off? I have a 3' pod on my hourston 20 and I feel the same.
@@raganriley nope 1/2” stainless steel bolted through a transom over 3” thick. Definitely not going anywhere
Nice work…
What was the part number for the actual cable? (NMEA Honda Cable) thanks
Honda 06328-ZZ3-760HE Nmea 2000... www.amazon.com/dp/B00AJTQSL2?ref=ppx_pop_mob_ap_share
Did you have to get a special cable to run from the Honda to the NEMA? What year is your outboard?
Yes. It’s a 2019. Found it on Amazon
If I just want to read the engine data on my Simrad Go, do I need a complete backbone? Or is a direct nmea200 cable from the engine to the simrad enough?
Did you try connecting directly? Thnaks
No you need backbone, NMEA connector from motor to a t, 12v power supply to a tee, and a drop cable from your simrad to a tee
If I just want to read the engine data on my Simrad Go, do I need a complete backbone? Or is a direct nmea200 cable from the engine to the simrad enough? Please answer
No you need backbone, NMEA connector from motor to a t, 12v power supply to a tee, and a drop cable from your simrad to a tee
Many thanks