The dock hand at the last marina I was at must have shorted my plug. The cord works but would you use this cord?
Ditto Dave's answer. That black stuff is an early warning that something is wrong in the circuit. Was that plug at the dock pedestal or the boat? Ours is at the dock with the cord socket at the boat. I'm still confident of the original style of shore power cord rather than the smart plug. To each his own. I've attached a strain relief on each end of the cord so that any boat movement will be absorbed by this relief. I also cleaned up the shore power circuit on our boat just to stay on top of these matters. Both cords for our boat remain free of any scorching or discoloration. That was not always the case; another story.The cord works but would you use this cord?
That's part of the problem. Usually it's just the plug that fails due to a bad connection.The question that you didn't ask is what caused the plug to overheat? If that question remains unanswered, then it can happen again, may be with less benign results.
It appears the smart plug is for the boat side of the cord, not the dock side. I ordered a new male plug.Do yourself a favor. Perfect time to cut the bad end off, and install a SmartPlug upgrade kit.
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It is. My point was that once you needed a new end anyway, you could turn the cable around, cut the bad end off and put the SmartCord (boat) end on, and swap the inlet.It appears the smart plug is for the boat side of the cord, not the dock side. I ordered a new male plug.
I doubt the dockhand did this, I think he just noticed it.How is it that the dock hand did this?
Bingo!!! Heritage nailed it. I failed to mention it in my post. Thank you heritage for your sage advice.One way to reduce the risk of burnt cords is to avoid plugging into the pedestal when equipment is turned on in the boat.
While this is one part of it, and a best practice that one should always do, it is by no means a preventive measure against the twist-lock receptacles losing spring tension, corroding or over drawing the receptacle and creating high resistance.Bingo!!! Heritage nailed it. I failed to mention it in my post. Thank you heritage for your sage advice.
A practice that I learned many years ago from a marine electrician, after purchasing Belle-Vie, was to shut off the main breaker on the boat BEFORE unplugging/plugging shore power. Our dock pedestal does not have a breaker switch. If current is flowing when you unplug/plug the cord at either end that can cause some arching, and over time result in weakening/burning the spade contact points. Shutting off the flow of electricity needs to be your first step.
I do not understand this thought. Dock on fire, dock burning down, boat tied to dock. How does the boat escape the fire?With a failure at the pedestal the dock will burn down, but not the boat.
A little tongue in cheek. If the plug starts a fire on the boat, the boat is by definition on fire. If the fire starts in the pedestal, there is a chance that someone will notice and put it out before it gets to the boat or the boat will get moved.I do not understand this thought. Dock on fire, dock burning down, boat tied to dock. How does the boat escape the fire?