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First recorded activity by BoatBanter: Nov 2013
Posts: 2,563
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??? upgrading shore power to 50A 220V
On 3/18/2014 12:40 AM, Wayne.B wrote:
On Tue, 18 Mar 2014 00:22:52 -0400, KC wrote:
On 3/17/2014 7:57 PM, Mr. Luddite wrote:
On 3/17/2014 7:14 PM, wrote:
On Mon, 17 Mar 2014 18:19:42 -0400, KC wrote:
On 3/17/2014 6:01 PM, david@righthere... wrote:
I've been on 30A 120V power at the dock for years and would now like
to upgrade
to 50A 220V, or what they refer to as 50A 250V at the marina office.
I haven't
put a meter on it yet but so far suspect it's closer to 220 than
250. The socket
on the pedestal is like the one pictured he
http://www.catagle.com/68-153/CWD_Ar...uyersGuide.htm
They say it's 3-pole 4-wire. I'm guessing X and Y are the two hot
legs and W is
the neutral. Between X or Y and W would be 120V+/- and between X and
Y is the
220/250V. Right? How does the ground tie into it though? With only 3
poles do we
run a separate wire from the boat to the pedestal, and if so how do
we tie in?
Also can anyone suggest the cheapest place to get a plug like that?
So far the
best price I've found is $68.18 he
http://www.ktool.net/servlet/the-581...-63CR65/Detail
Thank you for any help!
David
The plug is 10-20 bucks at home depot or lowes, Scottys whatever you
have. It's a dryer plug basically... As to the wiring, I forget but I
have a book I always use when I do the wiring.. It was about 20 bucks at
home depot, I have had it for as long as I have owned a house...
Not true at all, sorry.
This is a non-NEMA twist lock 50a plug, that is corrosion resistant.
A dryer plug is a NEMA 14-30 straight blade that would go south pretty
quickly on a pier.
Yup. I think Scotty should stick to building websites and not wiring
boats.
Why, cause I took a quick look and made a mistake? I have done a lot of
wiring in my time including my whole house to code in Essex from moving
in with full Knob and Tube... I have done barns, and wells. When you
have a 100 year old house you tend to pick up stuff. You should see me
sweat a pipe.... even if I don't know all the right terminology. Either
way, that's why I always keep my electrical book with me to check my own
work as I go....
===
Scott, just my 2 cents worth, but when a guy is asking for advice on a
potentially critical/high powered electrical issue, I think it
deserves more than a quick look.
Yup... probably right..
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