Wouldn't even need that (and that would bring in other unrelated issues) simply measure the voltage at the shore plug, and main breaker. Seeing more than a few hundredths of a volt difference would be a good indicator of a problem. Pass the data along the powercable, and read it onboard. That does sound useful tbh. Especially if the sensor and sending unit could be incorporated in the shore power cable end.
> I've often wondered, based on my experience with high-frequency systems, > if designing a little gadget that occasionally sends a, say, 100MHz > burst signal down a power cord and gauges its impedance (which would > instantly catch situations like that) might be a worthwhile business > idea. Then, I remember my forays into marketing stuff like that, and > forget all about it. :) > > -- http://neon-buddha.net _______________________________________________ Liveaboard mailing list [email protected] To adjust your membership settings over the web http://liveaboardonline.com/mailman/listinfo/liveaboard To subscribe send an email to [email protected] To unsubscribe send an email to [email protected] The archives are at http://www.liveaboardonline.com/pipermail/liveaboard/ To search the archives http://www.mail-archive.com/[email protected] The Mailman Users Guide can be found here http://www.gnu.org/software/mailman/mailman-member/index.html
