Slowboat35
Well-Known Member
My Victron Phoenix 12/1200 inverter has just died after a short, dry life of almost regal idleness.
There is no sign of life on the front panel and upon removing the cover I find a healthy 12v at the big 25mm input cable terminals but not a sign of life elsewhere on the board which I have not yet removed. The stonking great purple 12v fuse is intact. deffo.
Is there a lower rated fuse elsewhere to protect the circuit board? If so I didn't find it.
Victron appear to hide behind their agents and one of those I spoke to wasn't interested unless they were the vendors - which I cannot tell as I bought the unit with the boat!
To their credit ASAP Supplies did call me back with the number of a company that might help but I haven't been in touch yet. Big chuck-up again for ASAP's customer service and helpfulness!
What I really need is a small jobbing local electrical/electronic engineer who can just stick a 'scope on it and find out what's wrong. It can't be that difficult!
Anyone know one of these in E Anglia, closer to Ipswich/Lowestoft/Norwich the better? Failing that any workshop answering the description.
Next, to get the damn thing out of the boat. Apart from the usual inconvenience of it being attached upside down in an inaccessible hole and constrained by cables about as flexible as broomsticks it should be easy...
To get it out I need to disconnect the 12v power cables. They enter the unit via these fittings - but what is it and how does it work?
Is it a plug by which I can disconnect the cable or is it merely a gland to allow that cable to pass through the case undamaged - and to be attached somewhere rather inaccessible inside? Either way I need to know how to release tha cable from it without breaking it.
Can anyone please tell me:
a) what these fittings are called?
b) how to release a cable from one?
c)how are inverters like this fitted? Is it really dockyard job for an electrician to dismantle the unit, remove circuit boards, fabricate cable end fittings to suit taking hours - seems a heck of a plalaver when I'd expect it to more or less plug in- or am I way off the mark here?

It seems a terrible shame to ditch a perfectly servicable unit in virtually as new condition just because a component has popped -
it also doesnt' help that Victron's current replacent model is considerably bigger and won't fit the space at all - even if I fancied paying for it!
Agh! Boats!
There is no sign of life on the front panel and upon removing the cover I find a healthy 12v at the big 25mm input cable terminals but not a sign of life elsewhere on the board which I have not yet removed. The stonking great purple 12v fuse is intact. deffo.
Is there a lower rated fuse elsewhere to protect the circuit board? If so I didn't find it.
Victron appear to hide behind their agents and one of those I spoke to wasn't interested unless they were the vendors - which I cannot tell as I bought the unit with the boat!
To their credit ASAP Supplies did call me back with the number of a company that might help but I haven't been in touch yet. Big chuck-up again for ASAP's customer service and helpfulness!
What I really need is a small jobbing local electrical/electronic engineer who can just stick a 'scope on it and find out what's wrong. It can't be that difficult!
Anyone know one of these in E Anglia, closer to Ipswich/Lowestoft/Norwich the better? Failing that any workshop answering the description.
Next, to get the damn thing out of the boat. Apart from the usual inconvenience of it being attached upside down in an inaccessible hole and constrained by cables about as flexible as broomsticks it should be easy...
To get it out I need to disconnect the 12v power cables. They enter the unit via these fittings - but what is it and how does it work?
Is it a plug by which I can disconnect the cable or is it merely a gland to allow that cable to pass through the case undamaged - and to be attached somewhere rather inaccessible inside? Either way I need to know how to release tha cable from it without breaking it.
Can anyone please tell me:
a) what these fittings are called?
b) how to release a cable from one?
c)how are inverters like this fitted? Is it really dockyard job for an electrician to dismantle the unit, remove circuit boards, fabricate cable end fittings to suit taking hours - seems a heck of a plalaver when I'd expect it to more or less plug in- or am I way off the mark here?

It seems a terrible shame to ditch a perfectly servicable unit in virtually as new condition just because a component has popped -
it also doesnt' help that Victron's current replacent model is considerably bigger and won't fit the space at all - even if I fancied paying for it!
Agh! Boats!
Last edited: