Wiggo
Well-Known Member
No! No! Take the money!unscrew the lid and see what's in the box
No! No! Take the money!unscrew the lid and see what's in the box
are the floating connectors coded ? do they have a number or label on them,
sorting where these wires go to, would clear up a lot
as the unit is not connected anymore, perhaps you could get it out, and make some more pictures,
looking at these pictures (also under the heatsing (?)) it might be possible to recognise the cirquit and know what it could do.
how many amps are the fuses ?
are you sure there is no other connection / terminal posts on the other side ?
If there is only these two connectors,
then I guess it is a home made thing, with a same connector for input and output, so a dangerous situation for whatever it does.
can't you just "call" the previous owner ?
I know, that's less fun on here![]()
It's definitely not the old battery charger then?
a) if it is not an American boat.
It has to be an inverter
I have no idea what else it can be .. I assumed 110V by the way ( I dont know!!)Why? Where's the evidence of any heavy-current 12v wiring going to the batteries? WhiteMisch has said there are no other connections, beyond the ones we can see in the pic
Those sockets are international standard, iec320series, type c 15-16, rated 10amps, so if used (unwisely) for the 12v supply to the inverter then the inverter would then supply a miniscule 0.5amps at 230v (divide the amps supplied on the 12v side by 20, to get the available amps on the 240v side). That's implausible.
Therefore, if there is no 12v heavy current supply to the box it just can't be an inverter? Or it's a 0.5amp inverter with exposed 240v pins in a boat engine room... Lovely!![]()
The gauge of the wires on the IEC leads would indicate a high current application, 20 - 25amps capable, and the 15A fuse would indication it's not AC, to me anyway.
Pull it out and trace the wiring back, or if your nads are big enough, plug it in and see what happens
As someone has said, are there volts, either AC or DC on the IEC leads? Their gender would indicate that they are supply leads.
The gauge of the wires on the IEC leads would indicate a high current application, 20 - 25amps capable, and the 15A fuse would indication it's not AC, to me anyway.
Pull it out and trace the wiring back, or if your nads are big enough, plug it in and see what happens
As someone has said, are there volts, either AC or DC on the IEC leads? Their gender would indicate that they are supply leads.
Those IEC320 plugs/sockets are 10A rated.
Very true but judging from the botch that it is, do you think the person who built it knew that?
after more close inspection of the wires on the sockets, I believe it is a self made DC to DC stabilizer
so either the previous owner used to have a 12V electronic device that needs stabilized 12V (and can't have 14+ volt that comes out the alternator)
or a lower voltage device f.e. 5volt,
so then the unit is a 12VDC to 5VDC convertor / stabiliser.
looking at the components inside could be a cleu
you might find some unused wires at the other end, in the dashboard f.e.
Very true but judging from the botch that it is, do you think the person who built it knew that?