Marine Electrical in Montana
Browsing all marine service providers in Montana. We're still tagging shops by service type — for now, listings below cover the full Montana marine industry.
Marine electrical work is its own discipline — saltwater corrosion, galvanic isolation, and DC-AC system integration all matter in ways automotive electrical doesn't. Look for an ABYC-certified marine electrician (American Boat & Yacht Council) for anything beyond basic wiring. Common jobs: battery bank upgrades to lithium, shore-power inlet replacement, navigation electronics installation, and corrosion troubleshooting.
Marine service providers in Montana
No exact electrical matches yet — these are the major marine shops in Montana.
Riverside Marine & Cycle
VerifiedBoat Shop · Repair services
2323 South Haynes Avenue, Miles City, MT 58301-5806
+1-406-232-3300Website
Adipose Boatworks
UnverifiedBoat Builder · Repair services
MT
Dream Marine
UnverifiedBoat Shop · Repair services
MT
Enduro Products, Inc
UnverifiedBoat Shop · Repair services
MT
High Country Boats
UnverifiedBoat Shop · Repair services
MT
Launch Watersports
UnverifiedBoat Shop · Repair services
MT
Montana Boat Center
UnverifiedBoat Shop · Repair services
MT
Morning Star Troutfitters/svc
UnverifiedBoat Shop · Repair services
MT
Mountain Auto and Marine
UnverifiedBoat Shop · Repair services
MT
Ro Drift Boats
UnverifiedBoat Shop · Repair services
MT
Rubber Ducky River Rentals
UnverifiedBoat Shop · Repair services
MT
Stephens Marine
UnverifiedBoat Shop · Repair services
MT
Frequently asked questions
- What does ABYC certification mean?
- The American Boat & Yacht Council certifies marine technicians on standards specific to boats — DC/AC integration, corrosion, fuel systems, etc. ABYC-certified electricians follow industry-recognized safety standards that insurance companies often require for major work.
- Should I switch my boat batteries to lithium?
- Lithium (LiFePO4) batteries weigh ~70% less than equivalent AGM, last 5–10x longer, and recharge much faster. Trade-offs: 3–4x upfront cost and a properly designed charging system to avoid damage. Most marine electricians recommend lithium for boats spending significant time off-shore-power.