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#1
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On Wed, 04 Jul 2012 10:41:09 -0400, Oscar wrote:
Anybody? ==== We had a little excitement here this morning. We're at a local south west Florida marina with a bunch of friends for the holiday, all on their own boats. My wife went out for a few minutes this morning after breakfast to kibitz with the other women. She came running back a minute later yelling that Rich's boat was on fire. Rich has a 40 something, twin diesel Silverton and is docked directly behind us. I grabbed a 5 pound dry chem extinguisher and went running back to see what I could do. The engine room hatches were open and smoke was coming out so I asked where the fire was, pulled the pin on the extinguisher and prepared to do what I could. The owner waved me off as he was already talking to the fire department on his cell phone and they were ordering everyone off the boat. They showed up a few minutes later with a crew from a ladder truck toting air packs, extinguishers, fire axes, a thermal maging camera and a huge amount of other gear. Meanwhile we turned off the shore power dock breaker and unplugged the cable just to make sure. In the end it turned out to be an over heated/burned out battery charger and it rapidly turned into a non-event once the power was removed. The owner claims to not know what brand of charger it was but I'll try to find out and put in on my "avoid" list. Supposedly it is a marine quality, permanent charger that had been professionally installed recently. I've heard of several other battery charger fires on boats but they were all from small automotive type portable units, attached with alligator clips. |
#2
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posted to rec.boats
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On 7/4/2012 12:22 PM, Wayne B wrote:
On Wed, 04 Jul 2012 10:41:09 -0400, Oscar wrote: Anybody? ==== We had a little excitement here this morning. We're at a local south west Florida marina with a bunch of friends for the holiday, all on their own boats. My wife went out for a few minutes this morning after breakfast to kibitz with the other women. She came running back a minute later yelling that Rich's boat was on fire. Rich has a 40 something, twin diesel Silverton and is docked directly behind us. I grabbed a 5 pound dry chem extinguisher and went running back to see what I could do. The engine room hatches were open and smoke was coming out so I asked where the fire was, pulled the pin on the extinguisher and prepared to do what I could. The owner waved me off as he was already talking to the fire department on his cell phone and they were ordering everyone off the boat. They showed up a few minutes later with a crew from a ladder truck toting air packs, extinguishers, fire axes, a thermal maging camera and a huge amount of other gear. Meanwhile we turned off the shore power dock breaker and unplugged the cable just to make sure. In the end it turned out to be an over heated/burned out battery charger and it rapidly turned into a non-event once the power was removed. The owner claims to not know what brand of charger it was but I'll try to find out and put in on my "avoid" list. Supposedly it is a marine quality, permanent charger that had been professionally installed recently. I've heard of several other battery charger fires on boats but they were all from small automotive type portable units, attached with alligator clips. That's not the kind of fireworks excitement we want to see today. Might have been caused by a shorted battery or something else. I'm surprised the charger didn't blow a fuse |
#3
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posted to rec.boats
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"Wayne B" wrote in message
... On Wed, 04 Jul 2012 10:41:09 -0400, Oscar wrote: Anybody? ==== We had a little excitement here this morning. We're at a local south west Florida marina with a bunch of friends for the holiday, all on their own boats. My wife went out for a few minutes this morning after breakfast to kibitz with the other women. She came running back a minute later yelling that Rich's boat was on fire. Rich has a 40 something, twin diesel Silverton and is docked directly behind us. I grabbed a 5 pound dry chem extinguisher and went running back to see what I could do. The engine room hatches were open and smoke was coming out so I asked where the fire was, pulled the pin on the extinguisher and prepared to do what I could. The owner waved me off as he was already talking to the fire department on his cell phone and they were ordering everyone off the boat. They showed up a few minutes later with a crew from a ladder truck toting air packs, extinguishers, fire axes, a thermal maging camera and a huge amount of other gear. Meanwhile we turned off the shore power dock breaker and unplugged the cable just to make sure. In the end it turned out to be an over heated/burned out battery charger and it rapidly turned into a non-event once the power was removed. The owner claims to not know what brand of charger it was but I'll try to find out and put in on my "avoid" list. Supposedly it is a marine quality, permanent charger that had been professionally installed recently. I've heard of several other battery charger fires on boats but they were all from small automotive type portable units, attached with alligator clips. ------------------------------------------------------------------------ My converter in the camper smoked a couple years ago. Was a bad connection in the 12v line from the battery and smoked about 2" of 10 gauge wire and the board where the wire clamp was attached. So I think it can happen on any brand. Replaced the converter with a better one, but that is just a more modern 3 stage charger built in. |
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