egaito
Legendary Member
- Joined
- Jun 27, 2005
- Messages
- 1,153
- Status
- OWNER - I own a Hatteras Yacht
- Hatteras Model
- 41' CONVERTBLE-Series I (1964 - 1971)
I really missed you guys this weekend......
Took a trip over to a friends dock. They have a lot way up by the headwaters of one of the rivers that feed our lake, where they've placed a dock with shore power.
I ended up playing too long with a new toy (that's another story) and we went up at night, my favorite time to boat anyway.
So we pull up around 10:30pm, tie up, pop in the cables and throw the breaker, which immediately pops! After playing with this for awhile, I simply couldn't get the breaker to stay engaged with any type of load placed on them with two exeptions.
First was my battery charger. It was pumping out 15 or so amps of charge power, but the breaker held. The other circuit I could activate was my soloon lights. Anything else, even when activated individually would trip the breaker.
Since the boat never blows dock breakers at the marina, and is GFCI, I figure there must be something about how the boat is wired that's making the GFCI gods angry.
Another clue toward this conclusion is that the owner and her son both use the dock, sometimes together, with their '43 Chris and '39 Sea Ray. They can't pull their full load at the same time, but are able to run refridgeration, air, TV's, battery chargers....basically everything but their stoves at once.
So what could be wrong with my wiring?
I offered to change out the breaker. It's core rule to put them on residential docks, though not required in marinas here.
Took a trip over to a friends dock. They have a lot way up by the headwaters of one of the rivers that feed our lake, where they've placed a dock with shore power.
I ended up playing too long with a new toy (that's another story) and we went up at night, my favorite time to boat anyway.
So we pull up around 10:30pm, tie up, pop in the cables and throw the breaker, which immediately pops! After playing with this for awhile, I simply couldn't get the breaker to stay engaged with any type of load placed on them with two exeptions.
First was my battery charger. It was pumping out 15 or so amps of charge power, but the breaker held. The other circuit I could activate was my soloon lights. Anything else, even when activated individually would trip the breaker.
Since the boat never blows dock breakers at the marina, and is GFCI, I figure there must be something about how the boat is wired that's making the GFCI gods angry.
Another clue toward this conclusion is that the owner and her son both use the dock, sometimes together, with their '43 Chris and '39 Sea Ray. They can't pull their full load at the same time, but are able to run refridgeration, air, TV's, battery chargers....basically everything but their stoves at once.
So what could be wrong with my wiring?
I offered to change out the breaker. It's core rule to put them on residential docks, though not required in marinas here.