SweeperForce
Chief Petty Officer
- Joined
- Feb 7, 2010
- Messages
- 487
I got a battery charger you mount to the boat. Water and salt proof with 120 volts input and 14.1 output using 14 gauge wire. It has two outputs, one for each battery. The one set is for the starting battery, it has a 10amp in-line fuse on the positive lead. That makes sense. Now the second set is for the accessories, it has a 10 amp fuse on both the positive and the negative leads. That doesn't make sense. Can you shed some light on why its like this?
The leads out of the charger are only five feet. I need fifteen feet. They sell extension cables that are fifteen feet, that will give me plenty. Now the extension also have a fuse on the both leads. So that will be two fuses on the pos and two fuses on the neg for a 20 foot run, isn't that a bit excessive. The extension sells for $40 per set and I need two. So what I did is order 50 feet of duplex 14 gauge from my wire guy at half the price. This is tinned wire made for marine applications. Do I really need all these fuses?


Tom
The leads out of the charger are only five feet. I need fifteen feet. They sell extension cables that are fifteen feet, that will give me plenty. Now the extension also have a fuse on the both leads. So that will be two fuses on the pos and two fuses on the neg for a 20 foot run, isn't that a bit excessive. The extension sells for $40 per set and I need two. So what I did is order 50 feet of duplex 14 gauge from my wire guy at half the price. This is tinned wire made for marine applications. Do I really need all these fuses?


Tom