sdowney717
Well-known member
- Joined
- Mar 17, 2010
- Messages
- 964
is there a load center box where you can take in 2 hots on separate phases, breaker the output to 30 amps AND also include a neutral breaker on each hot breaker?
I know square-d makes neutral breakers ganged with hots. So basically your breaker protecting 4 wires, 2 hots and 2 neutral, each hot one its own phase.
I have a small main lug load center QO with no main breaker. I dont want to get into it much but it is an old boat and factory back then considered boats to be Appliances plugged into shore power. So the shore breaker at the pedestal or where- ever was the only protection for the wires feeding power to the boat.
for reference if some dont believe me here. My old boat was wired up like this so it is what it is since 1970 and know one shocked or killed yet.
so perhaps just would like to add some circuit protection to the feed wires from the shore pedestal which shore power also has breakers. So would like to know what is available as in a square-d type box.
any added box is in a dry location under the deck away from the bilge.
lots of redundancy and money required are the new standards.
I like how these articles always make you feel substandard and sensational risk taking from what was done in the past. Like do it the way it was always before and now your dead.
like the breaker is 1/4 mile away in an office, never ever seen that yet. and to bring boat to current standards, simply start over again from scratch
http://www.boatus.com/boattech/casey/36.htm
I know square-d makes neutral breakers ganged with hots. So basically your breaker protecting 4 wires, 2 hots and 2 neutral, each hot one its own phase.
I have a small main lug load center QO with no main breaker. I dont want to get into it much but it is an old boat and factory back then considered boats to be Appliances plugged into shore power. So the shore breaker at the pedestal or where- ever was the only protection for the wires feeding power to the boat.
for reference if some dont believe me here. My old boat was wired up like this so it is what it is since 1970 and know one shocked or killed yet.
so perhaps just would like to add some circuit protection to the feed wires from the shore pedestal which shore power also has breakers. So would like to know what is available as in a square-d type box.
any added box is in a dry location under the deck away from the bilge.
lots of redundancy and money required are the new standards.
I like how these articles always make you feel substandard and sensational risk taking from what was done in the past. Like do it the way it was always before and now your dead.
like the breaker is 1/4 mile away in an office, never ever seen that yet. and to bring boat to current standards, simply start over again from scratch
http://www.boatus.com/boattech/casey/36.htm
Circuit Breakers
Factory shorepower in older boats too often omitted a circuit breaker. The thinking was that a boat was just another "appliance" plugged into the marina circuit, which was already-protected. But faulty marina wiring is too common to entrust your safety to an unknown breaker behind a dock office a quarter of a mile away. A safe AC system requires an onboard dual-pole breaker.
The breaker's rating must not exceed the service; i.e., a 30-amp inlet limits the main breaker to 30-amp. However, if the circuit directly supplies outlets in the cabin, the size of the breaker is limited to the outlet ratings--either 15 or 20 amps.
A single-circuit offers the benefit of simplicity, but if you need multiple AC circuits, breaker panels are available with a main breaker and two or more branch breakers. Despite being commonplace, it is not a good practice to combine AC and DC in the same breaker panel.
Polarity
Reversed polarity leaves your AC circuits unprotected if you have a single-pole main breaker since the breaker is now on the neutral side. Even with double-pole breakers, reversed polarity puts ON-OFF switches on the wrong side of the circuit, leaving OFF appliances fully energized. Be sure your AC panel is equipped with a polarity tester.
Where branch breakers are single pole, be sure they are on the "hot" side of the circuit.
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