No, he was talking about making an adaptor to replace the shorepower
supply, which would be safe but ultimately draining. Sure you can do that,
but why. Invest in a safe and sane balanced electrical system .

Jim Watts
Paradigm Shift
C&C 35 Mk III
Victoria, BC


On 17 February 2014 19:46, Gmail <[email protected]> wrote:

> You need a selector switch to isolate the inverter from shore power. If
> you connect the output of the inverter to your receptacles and then hook
> them to shore power, you will likely destroy the inverter.
>
> Dennis C.
> Touché' 35-1 #83
> Mandeville, LA
>
> Sent from my iPhone
>
> On Feb 17, 2014, at 6:47 PM, Daniel Sheer <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> Can I connect the outlet of the inverter to the shore power inlet socket
> (using an adapter of course)? I don't see why this would be a problem, but
> what do I know. Even if I left the converter on it would just waste power,
> I think. The advantage, of course, is that all of the AC outlets on the
> boat would go live.
>
> Thanks for advice.
>
> Dan
>
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