T
tom_on_a_boat
Hello all,
I am new to the forum and am searching for some help and advice for an electrical challenge on my house boat.
I currently have to run my engine to power the oven (it runs off 240V circuit) and want to wire the oven into my 12V circuit to save time, fuel and my sanity. I have an existing 12V circuit which powers lighting and some applications and wondered whether it is safe to run a feed off 12V wiring going into the same fuse board.
I have thought up a solution which will be easy to do, and will involve running a feed off my fridge cable to connect up the oven. I am currently have a Waeco 80L 12v Fridge (spec at the bottom of this post), which is powered from my leisure batteries. (3X ABS LP110 12 Volt 110Ah Leisure and Marine Battery).
I wondered whether it would be safe to run a feed from the cable that powers the fridge (which is 12volt cable and 8mm thick). The feed would be to a small inverter which would then power the Oven. The cable I was planning to use for the feed is slightly thinner at 5mm thick.. The inverter is a MayaTech ,Spec - 12V -30A Max, Output220-230HV – 50Hz 400VA/330W.
·
The oven is a Belling XOU60LPG and according to their tech support team, has a requirement of 37W including Cooling fan, LED, ignition, light etc.
1. Firstly would the feed from the fridge cable be OK?
2. Is the cable for this sufficient or should it be the same thickness?
3. Would a connector block be the best way of doing this?
4. Finally, is this inverter safe/capable to use to power the oven? (it has an on/off switch and would only be used when the oven is in use)
Any help, comments or advice would be gratefully received.
Thanks
Tom
The spec for the Waeco is:
[TABLE="width: 500, align: center"]
[TR]
[TD]Voltage
[/TD]
[TD]12/24 volts DC
[/TD]
[/TR]
[TR]
[TD]Average Power Consumption
[/TD]
[TD]Approx. 48 watts
[/TD]
[/TR]
[TR]
[TD]Current Consumption (12 volts DC):
[/TD]
[TD]1.8 Ah/h at +25°C ambient temperature,
2.1 Ah/h at +32°C ambient temperature,
both at +5°C interior temperature and -18°C in the freezer compartment
[/TD]
[/TR]
[TR]
[TD]Insulation
[/TD]
[TD]Full foam insulation in CFC-free polyurethane foam
[/TD]
[/TR]
[TR]
[TD]System
[/TD]
[TD]Fully hermetic Danfoss BD35F compressor with integrated control electronics, low-voltage protection, electronic fuse/automatic reverse pole protection, dynamically ventilated wire tube condenser, mechanical, continuously variable thermostat
[/TD]
[/TR]
[/TABLE]
I am new to the forum and am searching for some help and advice for an electrical challenge on my house boat.
I currently have to run my engine to power the oven (it runs off 240V circuit) and want to wire the oven into my 12V circuit to save time, fuel and my sanity. I have an existing 12V circuit which powers lighting and some applications and wondered whether it is safe to run a feed off 12V wiring going into the same fuse board.
I have thought up a solution which will be easy to do, and will involve running a feed off my fridge cable to connect up the oven. I am currently have a Waeco 80L 12v Fridge (spec at the bottom of this post), which is powered from my leisure batteries. (3X ABS LP110 12 Volt 110Ah Leisure and Marine Battery).
I wondered whether it would be safe to run a feed from the cable that powers the fridge (which is 12volt cable and 8mm thick). The feed would be to a small inverter which would then power the Oven. The cable I was planning to use for the feed is slightly thinner at 5mm thick.. The inverter is a MayaTech ,Spec - 12V -30A Max, Output220-230HV – 50Hz 400VA/330W.
·
The oven is a Belling XOU60LPG and according to their tech support team, has a requirement of 37W including Cooling fan, LED, ignition, light etc.
1. Firstly would the feed from the fridge cable be OK?
2. Is the cable for this sufficient or should it be the same thickness?
3. Would a connector block be the best way of doing this?
4. Finally, is this inverter safe/capable to use to power the oven? (it has an on/off switch and would only be used when the oven is in use)
Any help, comments or advice would be gratefully received.
Thanks
Tom
The spec for the Waeco is:
[TABLE="width: 500, align: center"]
[TR]
[TD]Voltage
[/TD]
[TD]12/24 volts DC
[/TD]
[/TR]
[TR]
[TD]Average Power Consumption
[/TD]
[TD]Approx. 48 watts
[/TD]
[/TR]
[TR]
[TD]Current Consumption (12 volts DC):
[/TD]
[TD]1.8 Ah/h at +25°C ambient temperature,
2.1 Ah/h at +32°C ambient temperature,
both at +5°C interior temperature and -18°C in the freezer compartment
[/TD]
[/TR]
[TR]
[TD]Insulation
[/TD]
[TD]Full foam insulation in CFC-free polyurethane foam
[/TD]
[/TR]
[TR]
[TD]System
[/TD]
[TD]Fully hermetic Danfoss BD35F compressor with integrated control electronics, low-voltage protection, electronic fuse/automatic reverse pole protection, dynamically ventilated wire tube condenser, mechanical, continuously variable thermostat
[/TD]
[/TR]
[/TABLE]