[Public-List] Cabin light overloading circuit

Kris Coward via Public-List public-list at lists.alberg30.org
Mon Jul 6 11:57:05 PDT 2015


Disconnect the fixture from the circuit, remove the bulb, and test both
with a multimeter (test for resistance). Wherever the resistance is low
(less than 1 ohm would be a good cutoff for this test), you have a
problem (specifically, a short).

Hope this helps,
Kris

On Mon, Jul 06, 2015 at 06:44:27PM +0000, Brent Higgins via Public-List wrote:
> Question #2 for the day: I have old cabin lights that are mounted on the forward bulkheads above each settee (wooden base, a little swivel light with 2 metal connectors and the light shade is on a little wooden dowel). All lights are on one circuit, and all but one work fine. The starboard light fixture, when under load, surges from 10 amps to like 45 before the circuit trips. I am using the same bulb in each of these light fixtures, so I figure it is not the bulb. While I am trying learn as quickly as possible, I do not know really anything about the electric system on my boat. Any ideas? Is it as easy as just replacing the fixture or do you think it's a wiring issue? 
> Thanks,
> Brent
> _______________________________________________
> These businesses support your Association:
> http://www.alberg30.org/store/A30supporters.html
> Please support them.
> _______________________________________________
> Public-List mailing list
> Public-List at lists.alberg30.org
> http://lists.alberg30.org/listinfo.cgi/public-list-alberg30.org

-- 
Kris Coward					http://unripe.melon.org/
GPG Fingerprint: 2BF3 957D 310A FEEC 4733  830E 21A4 05C7 1FEB 12B3



More information about the Public-List mailing list