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"Andina Marie" wrote in news:1156600889.991305.164080
@b28g2000cwb.googlegroups.com: Inductive kick from switching a starter motor off does not get transmitted to the electronics. The inductive kick comes from the induction of the windings in the starter motor when the current is interrupted. But if the current has been interrupted it is no longer connected to the battery so the spike is restricted to the starter motor side of the switch. Ah, but what about the inductive kick that happens when the starter is running and the commutator brushes in it kick like hell switching windings on their way around? This kick, working against the normal corroded up terminals, wiring, connections in a boat can, indeed, be substantial. Just leave it until the damned radio won't transmit any more.....It's too much trouble to flip the breakers off.... Oh, by the way folks, turning electronics OFF with the switch on them doesn't turn electronics OFF, for the last 30 years or so. When you turn off any VHF transceiver, for instance, you are switching off the low- level electronics...receiver, transmitter exciter, PARTS of the synthesis electronics. Other parts, notably MEMORY for channel scanning and that big RF power brick that makes 25 watts bolted to the heat sink are CONNECTED TO THE DC ALL THE TIME! So, my suggestion to turn off the electronics at the source.... Aboard Lionheart is a continuous-duty master contactor. The contactor is controlled by a panel push-pull marine switch that simply turns the contactors coil on and off and lights a big red pilot light so my captain doesn't go off for 3 weeks and leave it all running. This contactor controls the "Electronics DC Bus" throughout the boat. The only radio that's not on it is the emergency VHF, an Icom M59, that has its own breaker. All the other electronics operates from the bus. Disabling the bus, disables all those continuously-connected devices NMEA doesn't want to waste money on switches to shut down. A few years ago, a little seawater made it way around the chinzy speaker seal of a Standard Eclipse Plus VHF radio, ran across the main PC board behind it and puddled up against the back heat sink on top of the board right under the power amp brick pins, driving the power amp control circuit into a continuous conduction state. This did NOT blow the radio's manufacturer fuse as the brick was only pulling 3 amps, all converted to 36 watts of heat that discolored the metal surface of the radio's heat sink in back, we later found. The boat was on a trailer and not hooked to a charger, so the radio simply killed the boat battery REALLY dead, so dead it would never recover. Since figuring out that one, all electronics needs to be hooked to some kind of disconnect device that totally disconnects all electronics on the boat from DC power before the boat is put away from use. I found another phenomenon that took me a while to comprehend. The boat had been put up for a month and a half while I was on Lionheart in Florida, dealing with engine flooding in Daytona Beach. The next time I went to use the portable GPS, I noticed the plastic plug on the dash had gotten really hard and brittle, so brittle it crumbled in my hand! The plug was the power/data plug for a Garmin handheld GPS. It simply disintegrated! This was caused by 12 volts DC and a little humidity caused by rain making it under the cover. Evidently, the 12VDC conducted around, and maybe through, the plastic the plug was made of, completely changing the chemistry of the plastic by electrolysis. The most damage was nearest the +12V pin near the surface of the hole the +12V was in. That pin simply fell out in my hand. This is another reason to secure all 12V power from all electronics, even electronics plugs just left open! How DO they engineer plugs so cheap 12 volts DESTROYS them?! -- There's amazing intelligence in the Universe. You can tell because none of them ever called Earth. |