Raymarine 215 mic

SeaRenity

Member
Mar 31, 2008
200
chesapeake bay / Back river
Boat Info
320 Sundancer 2005
Engines
350 Mag hor.
Newly rewired mic for Raymarine 215 for sale, I replaced the unit with a new Icom with
GPS. Mic works perfectly and as you can see from pictures has new coiled cord .
text 240 381 3903
 

Attachments

  • Ray 215 mic 2.jpg
    Ray 215 mic 2.jpg
    27 KB · Views: 141
  • Ray 215 mic1.jpg
    Ray 215 mic1.jpg
    25.5 KB · Views: 137
Would you mind sharing where you got it rewired (new cord) at?
 
Shoot. I was afraid that was the answer. Thanks, though. I'm going to keep searching - there's gotta be some outfit out there that can repair electrical cords (at a cost less than just buying a whole new unit!).
 
Shoot. I was afraid that was the answer. Thanks, though. I'm going to keep searching - there's gotta be some outfit out there that can repair electrical cords (at a cost less than just buying a whole new unit!).

IIRC, Raymarine was charging $75 to rewire one. I would think for not much more (low 100s) you could get a simple VHF (and flush mount kit) with comparable features brand new. With the dash filler/adapter panels that we sell (shameless plug) it is a very simple job for a DIYer or installer to replace the Ray215 and have a clean professional look. We have panels that cover a couple dozen modern VHF radios that are stock parts.

-Kevin
 
IIRC, Raymarine was charging $75 to rewire one. I would think for not much more (low 100s) you could get a simple VHF (and flush mount kit) with comparable features brand new. With the dash filler/adapter panels that we sell (shameless plug) it is a very simple job for a DIYer or installer to replace the Ray215 and have a clean professional look. We have panels that cover a couple dozen modern VHF radios that are stock parts.

-Kevin
Yeah, that's pretty much where I'm at - is it really worth it. In this case, I've had one (all of the components) sitting on my workbench for quite some time. My plan is to use this as a back-up with our boats up in Maine - so really just a "spare".
 
It's a 10-pin connector. There are 9 wires inside the sheath, plus a small, extra, bare silver (stranded). There's a bare copper stranded wire, as well - that one actaully wraps around the red and black wires. So... 9 colored wires, a bare copper stranded and a bare silver stranded (the silver one is smaller than the copper). There's a few cotton-like threads - which I assume is for integrity?

0-E8-C3-BA7-E689-4-A4-A-BC4-A-716-FE29-C9-D7-E.jpg
 

Forum statistics

Threads
113,163
Messages
1,427,598
Members
61,072
Latest member
BoatUtah12
Back
Top