Osprey":1aclc4ll said:
For the park circuit I believe it has been Ranger factory policy to use a parking fuse of 5 A per wiper motor on the circuit. The R21 boats have 3 motors so a 15A fuse has been used. R25, and 27 have 4 wiper motors so a 20A has been installed. At least this is my guess as to the 15 and 20A reports. As to 30A ?
It seems obvious to me a smaller fuse is required. In the event that a mechanical failure prevents one motor from parking, 20A or more flowing through one motor is going to cause serious motor over heating. In addition one should note that the AWG used in the parking circuit is #16. This is fine in that the motors normally park quickly which does not allow time for conductor overheating . However if there is a stalled park, continuous currents up 20A are beyond the maximum recommended for the AWG 16 runs in our boats. Be aware that turning off the wiper power switch located at the helm does not turn off power to the park circuit. In the event of a failed park, power to the park feature only terminates when the park fuse opens or when the park fuse is pulled.
That is not how electricity works. A motor that draws 5 amps when operating correctly will still draw 5 amps regardless of the size of fuse. Doesn't matter if the motor is on a 100amp or a 5amp fuse, it still only draws 5amps. The problem is that if the fuse is oversized for the wire (including what the manufacturer recommends for pigtails and internal wiring) and the motor does malfunction, the wire is no longer protected by the fuse and could be a major fire risk, or at the very least, damage impossible to reach wire runs. Imagine what would happen in a big bundle of wires if one burnt up in an inaccessible location.
It sounds like the manufacturer recommends that both circuits be on the same 5amp circuit.
If that is true, I can't figure out why for the life of me, anyone would purposely create a fire hazard and wire it incorrectly by putting all park circuits on an oversized fuse that will definitely lead to wiring overheating if a motor fails.
Either way the motor would still have failed and probably needed replacement, but if wired correctly should not create a fire hazard in case of failure.
I would give the factory the benefit of the doubt until you here from them, I really can't picture them hap hazardly doing stuff like this on these expensive little boats.
That being said, I highly doubt the park circuit is rated for anything above what the running circuit is rated for, as a potential customer in the next few months and a Master Electrician, I'm very curious about this issue myself.
Does anyone have a wiring diagram, manual or manufacturer part number for these motors?