โJul-28-2015 05:54 PM
โJul-29-2015 08:40 AM
โJul-29-2015 08:35 AM
GMandJM wrote:
In the event of low voltage situation or a lightning strike's resultant surge, the first thing (and hopefully only thing) to go will be the surge protector. I'd rather spend a few hundred dollars to replace that than anything/everything on my coach.
โJul-29-2015 08:15 AM
โJul-29-2015 08:11 AM
10forty2 wrote:
After losing my HVAC t-stat last weekend, and having to spend a warm night without A/C, I am going to order a power management system that plugs into my shore line and then into the pedestal....not the cheap kind either. I want something that will protect my equipment from low voltage and high voltage surges as well as improperly wired supply outlets. Losing an A/C unit is expensive, as well as anything that's plugged directly into the 120VAC outlets that are not powered through the batteries.
With that said, though, on most boats I have knowledge of, the majority of electronics on there are 12VDC. The shore power only supplies power to the battery chargers and a few outlets with are likely also powered by a DC-AC inverter. So with that configuration, you already have a filtered power system. Low or high voltage may take out your inverter but most likely wouldn't take out your 12VDC systems since they are running off the battery bank.
โJul-29-2015 07:29 AM
โJul-29-2015 06:29 AM
โJul-29-2015 05:54 AM
chuckbear wrote:GMandJM wrote:
We have a plug-in surge guard in addition to our on-board EMS system. As said above, the surge guard also checks for open ground and monitors for low voltage.
RVers might use these more often than boaters because we probably have more/different equipment on our RVs than would normally be on a boat- air conditioners, residential fridges, a computer or two, flat screen TVs, microwaves and the like.
All of those things and many more are found on boats. Which is why I ask. In addition, on a boat we have considerably more electronics, chartplotters, navigation computers, HF and VHF radios, Autopilots, weather and engine monitors, all interconnected, and then we have to deal with grounding all the systems so as to not have a problem with electrolysis. Chuck
โJul-28-2015 07:22 PM
โJul-28-2015 07:12 PM
โJul-28-2015 07:08 PM
GMandJM wrote:
We have a plug-in surge guard in addition to our on-board EMS system. As said above, the surge guard also checks for open ground and monitors for low voltage.
RVers might use these more often than boaters because we probably have more/different equipment on our RVs than would normally be on a boat- air conditioners, residential fridges, a computer or two, flat screen TVs, microwaves and the like.
โJul-28-2015 06:59 PM
โJul-28-2015 06:58 PM
โJul-28-2015 06:54 PM
โJul-28-2015 06:53 PM