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James
 
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Default 12V mystery

Nothing personal but I don't recomend crimped on ends to anyone on a boat.
In a few years you've just got another bad connection. Solder all your ends
on.

"Terry K" wrote in message
oups.com...
A short should pop a fuse, somewhere, instantly. It sounds like an
intermittent open in the 12v line, or a bad common ground at the
outlet.

Sounds like the helm outlet is a connection point, a poor one at that,
to feed the stereo. Unscrew the centre insert or behind the panel
barrel and that should release it all for servicing or replacement.
Turn off the circuit and disconnect the terminals behind the (cigarette
lighter?) outlet, first, or disconnect the batteries.

The connectors on these things are usually push on spade connectors
which do not take to tightening well. The wire end terminals probably
are old and need new ones crimped on. Buy a decent crimper and keep it
aboard, if that is the problem, you might have more of the same
pending. It could be the wires are just twisted together back there,
I've seen worse.

Terry K



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Jeff
 
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Default 12V mystery

The ABYC disagrees:

E-8.15.18 Solder must not be the sole means of mechanical connection
in any circuit.
E-8.15.19 Solderless crimp-on connectors shall be attached with the
type of crimping tools designed for the connector used and which will
produce a connection meeting the requirements of ABYC E-8.15.14.

Just today I had a 12 volt socket fail because it used a solder only
connection.

Get a real crimper, not the $8 imitation. Use the heatshrinkable
crimp-on connectors.


James wrote:
Nothing personal but I don't recomend crimped on ends to anyone on a boat.
In a few years you've just got another bad connection. Solder all your ends
on.

"Terry K" wrote in message
oups.com...

A short should pop a fuse, somewhere, instantly. It sounds like an
intermittent open in the 12v line, or a bad common ground at the
outlet.

Sounds like the helm outlet is a connection point, a poor one at that,
to feed the stereo. Unscrew the centre insert or behind the panel
barrel and that should release it all for servicing or replacement.
Turn off the circuit and disconnect the terminals behind the (cigarette
lighter?) outlet, first, or disconnect the batteries.

The connectors on these things are usually push on spade connectors
which do not take to tightening well. The wire end terminals probably
are old and need new ones crimped on. Buy a decent crimper and keep it
aboard, if that is the problem, you might have more of the same
pending. It could be the wires are just twisted together back there,
I've seen worse.

Terry K




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JIMinFL
 
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Default 12V mystery


"James" wrote in message
ink.net...
Nothing personal but I don't recomend crimped on ends to anyone on a boat.
In a few years you've just got another bad connection. Solder all your
ends on.

Others do recommend crimped connections. Soldering can stiffen the wire and
cause breakage at the point it becomes flexible again, if not supported
against vibration and flexing.
Jim.


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