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On Nov 18, 2:03 am, Bruce in Bangkok wrote:
On Sat, 17 Nov 2007 12:13:50 -0800 (PST), " The manual for my Horizon 1500 says 2 AWG (25mm^2) is adequate for a 60' run. -- Tom. You have to calculate both sides of the circuit. 40' from the battery to the winch and 40' from the winch back to the battery. A 80' run of wire. ... Fair enough. For a 90' run the manual says 1 AWG and for a 120' run it says 1/0. -- Tom. |
#2
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On Sun, 18 Nov 2007 11:21:06 -0800 (PST), "
wrote: On Nov 18, 2:03 am, Bruce in Bangkok wrote: On Sat, 17 Nov 2007 12:13:50 -0800 (PST), " The manual for my Horizon 1500 says 2 AWG (25mm^2) is adequate for a 60' run. -- Tom. You have to calculate both sides of the circuit. 40' from the battery to the winch and 40' from the winch back to the battery. A 80' run of wire. ... Fair enough. For a 90' run the manual says 1 AWG and for a 120' run it says 1/0. -- Tom. Then do it. A friend fiend bought a second hand cat and was complaining about how gutless the windless was. I suggested he check the voltage at the motor terminals with the windless under load. He did and found low voltage. His decision was to install a separate battery solely for the windless in the forward compartment, but regardless of the method you need to have at least 12 volts at the motor terminals when the windless is under load. Bruce-in-Bangkok (Note:remove underscores from address for reply) |
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