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There is another issue that hasn't been addressed by the group. That issue
is in-rush current when connecting an isolation transformer. The problem can be severe if the transformer is correctly sized. I use a transformer that I had custom made for me in Ankara, Turkey. It is 10 KW and it can use shore power from 100V to 280V on either 50 or 60 Hz so it is usable anywhere in the world. The problem is how to keep the in-rush current from popping the service breaker and one answer is a light bulb in series with the primary. Once power has been applied, simply throw a shorting switch bypassing the light bulb before using a load. Steve "Larry" wrote in message ... "Glenn Ashmore" wrote in news:tbnlg.112499$Ce1.112216 @dukeread01: Definitely mount it on the boat. Once you make a place for it to mount wiring it up is simple but I wish I could find a Charles transformer for less than $500. I need two and the best price I have found is $670 each. Hmm....50A service at 120VAC = 6 KVA. http://www.charlesindustries.com/main/ma_iso_bost.html 16" x 15" x 12" and weighs 155 lbs....about as much as one passenger. Can't put it in the bilge where it'll rot in the wet, but try to keep it as low as possible and near centerline so you don't lean over too far. Here....justification!: http://www.charlesindustries.com/main/ma_iso_bost.html "The Isolation Transformer The ABYC defines an Isolation Transformer as a transformer installed in the shore power supply circuit on a boat to electrically isolate all AC system conductors, including the AC green grounding conductor on the boat from the AC system conductors of the shore power supply. If we are bringing AC shore power aboard to an electrical panel on a boat, a marine grade Isolation Transformer should always be used in the shore power circuit where it comes aboard, and before it reaches the AC distribution panel or any other device aboard. The AC shore power current passes through the transformer's primary windings only, and induces a current in the secondary windings, which supply the boat. Primary and secondary windings are insulated from each other, and a ground fault on the shore side will not involve our boat. At its simplest form, a transformer consists of two coils of wire in close proximity but electrically isolated from each other, usually wrapped around a common metal core to contain the magnetic fields produced. If an alternating current is applied to one of the coils, it will induce a similar current in the other coil. Most transformers are designed to step voltage up or down by having differing numbers of turns in the two coils. An isolation transformer has the same number of turns in each coil, serving only to isolate the boat from the shoreside power, but to give the same voltage. An Isolation Transformer is used because the shoreside AC power is referenced to ground. If you are connected to the earth and you touch the "hot" lead of a normal shoreside AC service, you will get shocked. The isolation transformer removes the ground reference from the ship's service. Neither of the two sides of an AC circuit on the boat is at ground potential. Therefore you must contact both sides of the onboard supply to shock yourself." |
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