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"Cired" wrote in
lkaboutelectronicequipm ent.com: Is there any advantages/disadvantages of placing the inline fuse closer to the battery or closer to the radio in a direct wire to the battery installation?. Thanks EVERY wire in the boat needs to be protected at the SOURCE, not the load! Unfortunately, the primary power system, in most boats, has no protection at all from loading and shorts beyond the wire's and battery's capacity to provide. So, a primary short causes the wires to catch fire or the battery bank(s) to explode as the electrolyte boils into steam. You'll find "Lionheart's" primary fuses located between the 6V golf cart batteries in each bank of 700AH. Her original primary power wiring and her battery capacity to produce power without boiling electrolyte is fused at a safe 150A, about the peak current it takes to crank the Perkins 4-108 on a cold day. She'll be dark, but safe and afloat. Her starting battery, a high-current regular starting battery is also fused at the battery terminal at 150A. Large fuses are all "slow blow" taking some time to melt such large elements. Works great. As to your directly connected radio, the radio is fused at the radio, probably in some cheap inline fuse out of a CB radio. Icom is. This fuse should be increased to one that won't blow (no sense blowing two fuses) and the proper fuse for the capacity of the wire and about 150% over normal radio drain at full power should be located on a fuse block mounted right on the battery box or on the bulkhead next to it....so the wire won't burn. Larry Let's short your starter hot terminal to ground and see if the boat survives. Let's short your ALTERNATOR battery terminal to ground to see what happens if it survives test 1. |
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