CaptMark
Jun 3, 2009, 11:57 AM
Perhaps someone can help us ascertain what caused this near disaster to occur:
Check out the attached pictures.
This is a Norcold Model 6162 gas/electric refrigerator installed on our houseboat. This particular model has an "AUTO" setting which we usually kept it on that switches back and forth between gas and electric. Our houseboat has no shore power but has a Honda EU3000 generator. This generator has a 20A breaker built in. The generator has a cable wired into the breaker box of the houseboat. These are 15A breakers and they seemed to be working fine. I had that fridge wire plugged into the same outlet with the plug for our 700W microwave. Because they were both 90 degree plugs, I had to use that outlet expander. The outlet expander has an indicator light on the side to show it is operating properly. I tested it at home and it appears to be working fine. It will be going in the trash. It is probable that the microwave and fridge were running at the same time. But at most the microwave was on for 3 or 4 minutes and it is only 700 W. The fridge heating coil is supposed to only pull 2.5 amps. The house 15 amp breaker never tripped.
I don't know when this damage occurred. I opened the access panel last weekend to bleed the gas line to light the fridge for the first time this year and discovered the damaged wire and charred wood. It must have occurred sometime last season as evidenced by green corrosion formed on the copper wire. We never smelled anything hot or burning and it's a very small cabin inside.
If you note in the pictures, it was the middle conductor-- the green chassis ground wire that fried. That wire was never part of the block that plugged into the back of the fridge. It was screwed to the chassis of the fridge. I checked the cord with a continuity tester--- both the + & - conductors show no break from end to end of the cord. I checked the house outlets with my meter and they all seem wired correctly.
Besides that ground burning, the minus side of the 12V DC wires that run the gas igniter for the propane burner for the fridge melted too like the AC was looking for ground through it. The + side of the 12V wiring has a 5A fuse right there before it plugs into the fridge and the fuse was not tripped. The + side showed no signs of heating. But the negative wire jacket was melted from the fridge to where it was wirenutted to conductors coming into the compartment. The wire nut even melted. The wire used to be white but is completely charred black. (See picture)
The refrigerator operates fine in gas mode. I ran it for 24 hours last weekend checking it continuously and there was no heating of the 12V wires. Of course I had that AC line disconnected.
Note in the pictures that the + & - conductors appear to not have overheated.
It is that 3rd ground wire that shows overheating.
Any idea what could have caused this?
Thanks,
Mark
Check out the attached pictures.
This is a Norcold Model 6162 gas/electric refrigerator installed on our houseboat. This particular model has an "AUTO" setting which we usually kept it on that switches back and forth between gas and electric. Our houseboat has no shore power but has a Honda EU3000 generator. This generator has a 20A breaker built in. The generator has a cable wired into the breaker box of the houseboat. These are 15A breakers and they seemed to be working fine. I had that fridge wire plugged into the same outlet with the plug for our 700W microwave. Because they were both 90 degree plugs, I had to use that outlet expander. The outlet expander has an indicator light on the side to show it is operating properly. I tested it at home and it appears to be working fine. It will be going in the trash. It is probable that the microwave and fridge were running at the same time. But at most the microwave was on for 3 or 4 minutes and it is only 700 W. The fridge heating coil is supposed to only pull 2.5 amps. The house 15 amp breaker never tripped.
I don't know when this damage occurred. I opened the access panel last weekend to bleed the gas line to light the fridge for the first time this year and discovered the damaged wire and charred wood. It must have occurred sometime last season as evidenced by green corrosion formed on the copper wire. We never smelled anything hot or burning and it's a very small cabin inside.
If you note in the pictures, it was the middle conductor-- the green chassis ground wire that fried. That wire was never part of the block that plugged into the back of the fridge. It was screwed to the chassis of the fridge. I checked the cord with a continuity tester--- both the + & - conductors show no break from end to end of the cord. I checked the house outlets with my meter and they all seem wired correctly.
Besides that ground burning, the minus side of the 12V DC wires that run the gas igniter for the propane burner for the fridge melted too like the AC was looking for ground through it. The + side of the 12V wiring has a 5A fuse right there before it plugs into the fridge and the fuse was not tripped. The + side showed no signs of heating. But the negative wire jacket was melted from the fridge to where it was wirenutted to conductors coming into the compartment. The wire nut even melted. The wire used to be white but is completely charred black. (See picture)
The refrigerator operates fine in gas mode. I ran it for 24 hours last weekend checking it continuously and there was no heating of the 12V wires. Of course I had that AC line disconnected.
Note in the pictures that the + & - conductors appear to not have overheated.
It is that 3rd ground wire that shows overheating.
Any idea what could have caused this?
Thanks,
Mark