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![]() "Larry" wrote in message ... wrote in : Can you make your own cord-using components from a US electrical supplier? Your electrical supplier will be able to outline the proper US standard and code. Look around, maybe you have a member at you club that is an electrical contractor and can held you? That's the curious part. Yachts don't use a standardized connector the rest of the electrical industry uses. There seems to be only a handful of suppliers (Hubbell, Charles, Marinco, etc.), specialty companies who can demand these rediculous prices, maybe in collusion with each other and the stores. I like your feedback. Last spring we at our club upgraded the electrical panels on the docks. A member contractor build all the panels as per the codes and standars with components purchased from wholesale electrical suppliers. We could use: http://www.electricgeneratorsdirect....duct_info.php? products_id=288 at $275. or buy the connectors: http://www.electricgeneratorsdirect....duct_info.php? products_id=276 at $36 http://www.electricgeneratorsdirect....duct_info.php? products_id=277 at $44 But, are these the same size? Boat plugs don't have that center guide pin, so I'd think they were "different". I don't think these will fit....at 1/3 the awful price of boat connectors. Why can't we wire marinas with NEMA 14-50R sockets? http://www.onestopbuy.com/279-8151.asp $9.39 ($7.88 if you buy 10 of them) Like EVERY electric stove in America uses....making them CHEAP! http://www.onestopbuy.com/275-T-6585.asp The plug is $25. I can hear it, "But they don't lock in place!". Waitaminit! What happened the last time someone's $800 twist-locked drop cord got pulled on on the dock? IT RIPPED APART! It's only plastic, you know. It doesn't need to lock onto the plug. The cord is usually wrapped around the post and puts NO STRAIN AT ALL on the plug! There ARE outside weatherproof covers for these cheap connectors! Do we need them? NO WE DON'T! The outlet on the dock is INSIDE a weatherproof box. Look at yours. The inlet on your boat could just as well be, as this French boat is, INSIDE a locker with a notch to put the cord in to close the locker. If it were INSIDE a locker, everyone walking down the little decks wouldn't be STEPPING ON THE PROTRUDING PLUG. We could eliminate the whole boat inlet nonsense and hard wire the boat's power cord to a NEMA box INSIDE THE LOCKER with a WINDER ON IT! Oh, what? The damned boat power cord always in the way at sea might WIND ITSELF UP INSIDE THE BOAT? How silly....it HAS to plug into the $150 inlet RIGHT WHERE YOU WALK IN AND OUT, doesn't it? Yes, because "we've always done it that way". Nonsense....The shore power cable is NOT USED AT SEA. It doesn't HAVE to, and if you look down the dock never is, all sealed up. These drop cords on all our docks is plugged in and left open. Those black sealing rings lay all over the place...(c; Larry -- $800 for a dropcord.....is just STUPID! Hell, we could reduce dock rent if we didn't need $200 connectors! |
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