Photolomy
Legendary Member
- Joined
- Jun 29, 2018
- Messages
- 1,069
- Status
- OWNER - I own a Hatteras Yacht
- Hatteras Model
- 53' MOTOR YACHT (1969 - 1988)
Remember when we were talking about 30A service and how we didn't need it? Well, in the yard that is all they have, and so I bought a single 50ft 30A cord, cause my chargers are only on one side. Anyways, it plugged into the yard outlet ok, but what I thought were 30A/125v outlets on the boat are actually 50A/125v outlets, not 30A/125v outlets, and they are labeled as such. The difference is that the 50A/125v haa one prong with a tab that goes down, while the 30A/125v version has a tab that goes up, and the three prongs are wired differently. My guess is that Hatteras did it so that you could use a 50A/250v cord and then some sort of 50A to 30A adapter on the dock side. I know that you can use a Y and connect 2 30A/125v out-of-phase dock connections, but that adapter is like $400. What I did was to cut off the female end of the 30A/125v cord I bought ($94) and added a female 50A/125v plug ($100) to match the boat. The 50A (female) to 30A (male) adapter would have been cheaper, but I needed to get it power today.
Here is a chart that shows the various types of outlets...

The bottom one is what we are used to for 50A/250v. The middle one is a standard 30A/125v cord, which is what I bought. The 4th one is what the 30A plugs on the boat are, 50A/125v. Note that the L shaped prong is opposite that of a 30A/125v plug, and the wiring is different.
This is the adapter you would use with a standard 30A cord...
https://www.amazon.com/Marinco-electrical-pigtail-adapter-121A/dp/B000NI1BGG/ref=sr_1_5?dchild=1&keywords=marine%2B50%2Bamp%2Bto%2B30%2Bamp%2Badapter&qid=1625349702&sr=8-5&th=1
As I said, I needed power now and the marina store had a 50A/125v plug available. I did not try plugging my 50A/250v cord into the 50A/125v boat outlet, but it looks like it would fit. But then you would need a 30A/125 to 50A/250v adapter AND it would have to be wired for 125v.
Maybe this one? ...
https://www.amazon.com/Marinco-electrical-pigtail-adapter-121A/dp/B000NI58ZG/ref=sr_1_5?dchild=1&keywords=marine%2B50%2Bamp%2Bto%2B30%2Bamp%2Badapter&qid=1625349702&sr=8-5&th=1
Of course, this would only power one leg (S1 or S2), you would have to repeat it for the second leg, and as Oscar found out, that won't give you 220v at all.
The other solution is to use a 30A Y that takes two out-of-phase 30A outlets and combines them into one 30A/250v outlet with a 50A/250v plug. The problem with that is that the two 30A outlets must be out-of-phase, or you will get nothing. And they are expensive.
Anyways, amps and voltage determines the plug configuration, and Hatteras didn't help much by putting odd 50A/125v male outlets for S1 and S2.
Here is a chart that shows the various types of outlets...

The bottom one is what we are used to for 50A/250v. The middle one is a standard 30A/125v cord, which is what I bought. The 4th one is what the 30A plugs on the boat are, 50A/125v. Note that the L shaped prong is opposite that of a 30A/125v plug, and the wiring is different.
This is the adapter you would use with a standard 30A cord...
https://www.amazon.com/Marinco-electrical-pigtail-adapter-121A/dp/B000NI1BGG/ref=sr_1_5?dchild=1&keywords=marine%2B50%2Bamp%2Bto%2B30%2Bamp%2Badapter&qid=1625349702&sr=8-5&th=1
As I said, I needed power now and the marina store had a 50A/125v plug available. I did not try plugging my 50A/250v cord into the 50A/125v boat outlet, but it looks like it would fit. But then you would need a 30A/125 to 50A/250v adapter AND it would have to be wired for 125v.
Maybe this one? ...
https://www.amazon.com/Marinco-electrical-pigtail-adapter-121A/dp/B000NI58ZG/ref=sr_1_5?dchild=1&keywords=marine%2B50%2Bamp%2Bto%2B30%2Bamp%2Badapter&qid=1625349702&sr=8-5&th=1
Of course, this would only power one leg (S1 or S2), you would have to repeat it for the second leg, and as Oscar found out, that won't give you 220v at all.
The other solution is to use a 30A Y that takes two out-of-phase 30A outlets and combines them into one 30A/250v outlet with a 50A/250v plug. The problem with that is that the two 30A outlets must be out-of-phase, or you will get nothing. And they are expensive.
Anyways, amps and voltage determines the plug configuration, and Hatteras didn't help much by putting odd 50A/125v male outlets for S1 and S2.
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