I recently blew a fuse to my cigarette-style charger, controlled by the switch labelled "Accessory 2" on my instrument panel, by plugging in a DC toy/mattress inflator. When I went back and read the fine print on the paper fragments they call a manual, it says "do not plug into cigarette ligher: power charger only" (it does not say how many amps it pulls).
I never knew there was a difference between a cigarette lighter and a power charger. So I went and looked at the cigarette lighter in my car, and lo and behold it is labeled as a "Power Charger--10amps Max", not a cigarette lighter. So I went back to the boat to look at the blown fuse and it says "5 amps, 240 volts", and the dc power charger at the instrument panel is West Marine and is rated for 15 amps. (Btw, I have since learned the 240 volts printed on the fuse refers to how many volts it would take to arc across the blown fuse and presumably fry the circuit).
Here's my question, since my car's power charger is rated at 10 amps max, and my power charger on the boat is rated for 15 amps, is there any danger to my wiring or instruments if I were to bump my fuse up from 5amp/240volt to a 10amp/240volt fuse, which would still be five less amps than my instrument panel charger is rated for?
Signed, total scaredy cat when it comes to electricity!
Joel Schwartz
s/v Get-A-Grip
1993 Catalina 36 Hull #1259
Newport Beach, California
my answer is a definite maybe. it depends on two main factors -- 1) what is the rating on the receptacle - it should be rated for at least what you plan on upping the fuse to, What size and how long is the wire from the fuse to the receptacle (the wire's "ampacity") ? http://www.westmarine.com/WestAdvisor/Marine-Wire-Size-And-Ampacity use a chart like what is attached to determine if you can up the fuse. Both items matter and the one with the lowest rating determines what fuse you can use..
Les & Trish Troyer
Mahalo
Everett, WA
1983 C-36 Hull #0094
C-36 MK 1 Technical Editor.
Commodore
Thanks for your reply. I went ahead and put a 10 amp fuse in because wire size is very short, and charger is rated for 5 more amps than I require.
Joel Schwartz
s/v Get-A-Grip
1993 Catalina 36 Hull #1259
Newport Beach, California
Just a note about the "philosophy" of fuses and circuit breakers.
It's always good to review these principles. I hope this helps.
Larry Brandt
S/V High Flight #2109
Pacific Northwest, PDX-based
2002 C-36 mkII SR/FK M35B
Thanks for the tutorial Larry, very helpful indeed!
Joel Schwartz
s/v Get-A-Grip
1993 Catalina 36 Hull #1259
Newport Beach, California
THE PURPOSE OF A FUSE IS NOT TO PROTECT THE LOAD; THE PURPOSE OF A FUSE IS TO PROTECT THE BOAT.
Great advice!! Sometimes our thought process can be narrow to the problem at hand, instead of the larger picture.
Mark Holzmann
"Hawkwind"
Sail #1246
Rose City Yacht Club-Portland OR
Quote: "THE PURPOSE OF A FUSE IS NOT TO PROTECT THE LOAD; THE PURPOSE OF A FUSE IS TO PROTECT THE BOAT."
This is the golden rule..
There is one caveat to this and that is bilge, macerator, shower sumps or any pump that could become "stalled" as in a locked rotor event. In this case a fuse no larger than the manufacturer recommends must be used to protect the pump. I see this violated daily and also see the melted piles of plastic that go along with it.
This is why AUTO/OFF/MANUAL bilge switches are so handy. You can protect the feed wire from the battery, sized for minimal voltage drop, with a 15A fuse, but then insert the 4A etc. fuse the pump maker recommends in the face of the bilge switch. If the rotor stalls that fuse will trip, it is designed and sized to do that. A stalled rotor can easily catch a pump on fire before a fuse trips.
-Maine Sail
https://www.marinehowto.com/