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Fish finder battery
#1
Does anyone know if I would be able to use this for my humminbird helix 5 ice fish finder have a couple of batteries for it but want to cut down on weight 
[Image: Screenshot-20250101-132912-Chrome.jpg]
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#2
The Norsk website says this:
Quote:[font="Open Sans", Arial, sans-serif]The 14.8V 20Ah Lithium-Ion Battery is purpose-built for live imaging and forward-facing sonar systems, making it the perfect choice for users of Humminbird MEGA Live Imaging™, Garmin Livescope™, and Lowrance ActiveTarget™. [/font]

I recommend you call Humminbird and ask them if the Helix series is compatible with a 14.8 vdc battery
Bob Hicks, from Utah
I'm 82 years young and going as hard as I can for as long as I can.
"Free men do not ask permission to bear arms."
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#3
It will work great, Helix units can handle up to 20 VDC. Those are good batteries, I run one on my ice unit as well.

https://humminbird.johnsonoutdoors.com/u...-gps-g3-pt
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#4
(01-02-2025, 01:09 PM)Coho975 Wrote: It will work great, Helix units can handle up to 20 VDC. Those are good batteries, I run one on my ice unit as well.

https://humminbird.johnsonoutdoors.com/u...-gps-g3-pt

Not dissing Coho975 at all, but as President Reagon quoted many times, 'Trust, but verify.'  (Russian proverb)  Big Grin
Bob Hicks, from Utah
I'm 82 years young and going as hard as I can for as long as I can.
"Free men do not ask permission to bear arms."
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#5
(01-02-2025, 05:50 PM)dubob Wrote:
(01-02-2025, 01:09 PM)Coho975 Wrote: It will work great, Helix units can handle up to 20 VDC. Those are good batteries, I run one on my ice unit as well.

https://humminbird.johnsonoutdoors.com/u...-gps-g3-pt

Not dissing Coho975 at all, but as President Reagon quoted many times, 'Trust, but verify.'  (Russian proverb)  Big Grin

Hence the link I posted that verifies the Helix is good from 10.8 volts to 20 volts...  Rolleyes
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#6
For what its worth, I use a similar (different brand) lithium with my Helix 7 for ice fishing.  No problems with it.  A few more amps and a lot less weight to carry.
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#7
(01-01-2025, 08:32 PM)pizzaman_288 Wrote: Does anyone know if I would be able to use this for my humminbird helix 5 ice fish finder have a couple of batteries for it but want to cut down on weight 
[Image: Screenshot-20250101-132912-Chrome.jpg]

I would suggest a 7ah or 10 ah 12 volt. Both are small and light and would get the job done.
Gabe
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#8
(01-01-2025, 08:32 PM)pizzaman_288 Wrote: Does anyone know if I would be able to use this for my humminbird helix 5 ice fish finder have a couple of batteries for it but want to cut down on weight 
[Image: Screenshot-20250101-132912-Chrome.jpg]
Helix draws about 615 ma.  That battery weighs just over 4 lbs and will get you about 32 hours of continuous operation with your Helix ($ ???).

A 12 vdc, 10 ah lithium battery weighs about 2.5 lbs and will get you about 16 hours of continuous operation with your Helix ($35 to $40).  A 12 vdc, 7 ah is ≅ 2 lbs and ≅ 11 hrs. ($25 to $30).  Personally, I'd go with the 7 ah one.  I don't overnight ice camp/fish and would get about 2 days of operation out of it.  Decisions, decisions, decisions!   Big Grin
Bob Hicks, from Utah
I'm 82 years young and going as hard as I can for as long as I can.
"Free men do not ask permission to bear arms."
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#9
I personally have a 7ah lead battery and it powers my ice finder for way longer than I can fishing in one day. I charge mine after a day's worth of fishing with a little charger made for it. Take about 3-4 hrs of charging. Less (weight and space) is "more" to me.
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