The problem is when these plugs become corroded, overheat and at times,
cause fires. The devastating fire at  Cotter Marina (?) was reported to
have been caused an overheated plugged connection. 

It is impossible to see inside the female connector and unless you
disassemble (which is often impossible) the plug you will never know its
condition.  ALSO: these connections are most often forgotten and
terribly neglected. They sometimes get yanked, contacts weaken with age,
corrosion and overheating results, but what the hell, It works, whats
the problem? Until there is one.

I disassembled a Hubble adapter and found regular coarse stranded wire
making the internal connections. The bare copper was very corroded at
the terminals and without disassembly would not be known. 

The condition of a ring terminal can easily be known, connections made
tight and strain relieved.  It may be less convenient,  but the problems
approach zero.  

My bucks worth. (inflation you know ;-)
-- 
S/V ORYOKI
Philip & Marilyn Lange
AE4OV    KD4JRC
Currently on the hill - Beaufort NC

"There's no point in making a plan if
 you're not going to pretend to follow it!"



On Thu, 2012-07-05 at 07:51 -0400, [email protected] wrote:

> Vern,Norm, etc.,
> 
> Please don't get me wrong because you know I truly value your input in areas 
> such as we're discussing now and I'll always (well, ___most___of the time 
> :-)) but I'm not so sure exactly what is wrong with using the OEM shorepower 
> recepticles which come with the boat.  We have a few large yachts (one @ 70' 
> and one beautiful 125' sailboat) which call our Marine Center home.  Norm, 
> you've seen them when you've been here on past July 4ths. Granted, I have no 
> idea what's going on below, behind the plug, but they connect to our 
> shorepower pedestals (I think they've go dedicated larger amperage ones)just 
> like the rest of us and the boatside end of the cable goes into recepticles 
> on the boat, just like the rest of us except larger.
> 
> I'll grant you that sometimes there's shoddy electrical work done at the 
> factory on production boats (that's a whole 'nuther thread!) but for the most 
> part the system works.  Seems to me that with proper inspection of the plugs 
> to insure nothing's burnt or overheated, you could go with the stock system 
> forever.
> 
> Steve
> 
>   
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