eastcoastbernie
Well-Known Member
I try to be practical and do as much maintenance as I can on my boat, but have to confess to being a complete failure when it comes to electrics.
I've looked on the bookshelves at boat shows for assistance and brought home volumes promising to teach me all I need to know. Once home, I sit down to read them. Rarely get past the first chapter.
Does anyone out there know of a book that really is aimed at someone whose sole experience of electricity is plugging it in and turning it on?
OK, I've wired up the odd instrument or two by looking very closely at what I've got already and copying that for the new instrument. And I've soldered one bit of wire to another and found that to work. And used things oddly named 'choc boxes' which are not the sort the man in the dark wet suit brings.
But start to talk of amps and ohms and stray currents and earths and .... god help me .... galvanic isolators and serious glazing over takes hold.
I really would like to understand. /forums/images/graemlins/confused.gif
I've looked on the bookshelves at boat shows for assistance and brought home volumes promising to teach me all I need to know. Once home, I sit down to read them. Rarely get past the first chapter.
Does anyone out there know of a book that really is aimed at someone whose sole experience of electricity is plugging it in and turning it on?
OK, I've wired up the odd instrument or two by looking very closely at what I've got already and copying that for the new instrument. And I've soldered one bit of wire to another and found that to work. And used things oddly named 'choc boxes' which are not the sort the man in the dark wet suit brings.
But start to talk of amps and ohms and stray currents and earths and .... god help me .... galvanic isolators and serious glazing over takes hold.
I really would like to understand. /forums/images/graemlins/confused.gif