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Shore power adapter question
Several of the places we dock have standard household 3-prong outlets for
shore power. We want to buy an adapter to match the shore power cable from our boat to this kind of outlet. I see two kinds. One is called a hand adapter and is simply a block of plastic about 4" long with the plug and socket molded into it. The other is a 1 foot long cord with the plug and socket at the two ends. Is there any reason to prefer one over the other? -- Peter Aitken |
Peter Aitken wrote: Several of the places we dock have standard household 3-prong outlets for shore power. We want to buy an adapter to match the shore power cable from our boat to this kind of outlet. I see two kinds. One is called a hand adapter and is simply a block of plastic about 4" long with the plug and socket molded into it. The other is a 1 foot long cord with the plug and socket at the two ends. Is there any reason to prefer one over the other? -- Peter Aitken Yes. The problem with the solid block adapter is that when combined with the mass of the connecting portion of your normal 30 or 50 amp cable, the entire, bulky works tends to fall out of some shorepower receptacles. Particularly with the 15-amp adapter you will want the pigtail. There is no "locking" tang on the 15-amp 3-prong fitting. I have a 20-amp solid block adapter and its a TPITA. Even when the adapter itself stays firmly secured in the shorepower outlet, there are times when the shorepower cable jiggles just slightly loose and there's no longer an adequate connetion. No problem with pigtail adapters, as the connection can hang straight down from the box and there is less strain at the final connection. Another small consideration, some shorepower stanchions have covers that can be closed once you are hooked up. Many of these will close with a pigtail in place- no problem- but some cannot be closed when there is an additional 2-3 inches of connector sticking out. |
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