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Bruce wrote in
news ![]() Re these 12 VDC continuous duty contractors available from the auto parts with the capacity to carry starting amperage. Can you elaborate a bit as I could sure use some of these to wire my power up/down anchor winch. You don't need continuous duty for anchor winch contactors. Any 12V starter solenoid will work just fine. Last time I looked, Ford was still using them on their cars...(c; That should make them really cheap. The only difference between a 350A starting solenoid and a 350A continuous-duty solenoid is how the coil is wound...and cooled. Both of them will crank a diesel from the house batteries. The starting solenoid will overheat after about 30-40 minutes of being "on". The continuous duty coil is larger with better cooling, costs a little more to produce. I'm using a 200A, continuous-duty solenoid to power the entire electronic suite bus on Liohheart. It draws about 1/4A to power its coil, which is left on for days at a time at sea. A red light over its power switch lights up the cabin at night and reminds my captain to shut off the electronics throughout Lionheart when he goes home. Only the emergency VHF (an Icom M59) and the Icom M802 HF radio are separately wired. Push the "electronics power knob" in and the boat shuts down, en masse. Works great. You won't overhead starter solenoid coils running the winches up and down..... Larry -- While in Mexico, I didn't have to press 1 for Spanish. While in Iran, I didn't have to press 1 for Farsi, either. It just isn't fair. |
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