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What's so good about marine wire that I shouldn't just get it Home Depot?
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BAR[_2_]
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First recorded activity by BoatBanter: Jun 2008
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What's so good about marine wire that I shouldn't just get it Home Depot?
In article ,
says...
wrote in message ...
On Thu, 19 Jan 2012 17:07:13 -0800 (PST), Tim
wrote:
On Jan 19, 3:43 pm, wrote:
On Thu, 19 Jan 2012 14:53:44 -0500, A boater wrote:
On 1/19/2012 2:51 PM, A boater wrote:
On 1/18/2012 9:00 PM, jps wrote:
On Wed, 18 Jan 2012 16:44:47 -0500, "
wrote:
Actually I just bought 2 spools of 25' ANCOR 16 AWG wire for
$28...the
dude talked me into it. I also bought a motor to replace the one in
the bilge pump housing @ $34.
I found the bilge motor for 28 online and the marine wire for, $32
Is marine wire worth paying the extra expence?
Is the wire you bought tinned?
JPS
All you want to know about Ancor marine grade wire.
Hope this helps
Oops, A link would help.
http://www.marinco.com/brand/ancor
I wired my running lights with garden variety #12 THWN but the wire is
all in conduit, terminating in water proof boxes. 22 years later it
still looks fine. The terminations were all coated with silicone
grease in burial grade 3M wirenuts. I know it is not all that nautical
sounding and I really did not expect it to hold up but it did.
This is a pontoon boat and they are pretty "wet".
I use regular 'ol wiring for my stuff. I dont' need top-dog wire for
what I do. Now if my boat was going to sit in salt water for a season
at a time or be exposed to the elements year around that would be
different. I look at my boat from an automotive stand point. I take
it out, use it, pull it it out of the lake, drain it, trailer it, and
put it back under roof on the hard until future use.
So I can't see justifying the extra expense to work with higher tinned
wire etc.
Of course your situations may be different than mine. I'm just saying
for my usage I have no problem with a roll of everyday 10 and 12#
The real trick is keeping all the terminations in a dry spot. I have
exactly ZERO splices in any wire. They go from the switch directly to
the load with no tapping along the way. You use a little more wire
that way but if I lose a light, I lose one and I know the two places
where to start looking. Everything is in conduit. Again that is a
pontoon boat thing. The wires run under the deck so they are in a
sealed race
----------------------------------------
Must not really need tinned wire. Bilge pump came without tinned wire, so I
guess it is not needed. :)
Planed obsolescence? Do these wires go into the bilge pump?
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