So, Ive had this P23 2 seasons now. Was proud of myself for fixing the lights and installing a new switch plate, the P.O. for 6 years never had the lights working.
All worked well, but this year the spring "test the lights leaves me with a dead anchor light.
Every spring I put together an extension wire with alligator clips so I can power the mast plug while mast is still horizontal. Steaming light good, no top light . Open up the housing, bulb falls apart in my hand..this is gonna be an easy fix! NOPE, new bulb ,nothing, multimeter at fixture , nothing, pull the male plug apart at bottom of mast, wiggle, tighten, fidget, nothing. Power is good at decktop female despite how ugly it is in the photos.So..sitting on my pickup bed, under the end of the mast sticking out over the bow..Hmm.
In the BIG picture, we are both pretty stressed right now with elderly parents, job issues, her retirement coming etc. Badly need this boat overboard soon to help relieve this!
I`ve decided that rewiring and lighting the mast will wait until the winter, I`ll leave the mast off the boat in the driveway next to it (another first)and plan and figure it out instead of rushing into a quickie repair job. I`m also gonna replace that decktop plug that will be it`s own special hell, I`m sure. We have decided this is the last boat, money and age restrict upsizing, so we`re gonna have it a long time and it`s worth doing this job right. I`m gonna research wiring, fixtures etc, figure it all out to start in the fall. I will be using a lantern up the pole for overnights this season, we only do 1 maybe 2 nights a season anyway.
Now the question: While poking around the deck plug with the multimeter, I established that the largest of the 4 prongs on the plug is the ground, with one hot for steaming light, one hot for anchor light and one unused. This is consistent with the information I have from Precision about the electric system.
What confuses me is that when I had the meter on ohms to check continuity, I had meter reading between the ground and all 3 of the other holes , even the unused one, this with all switches off inside. Does this indicate trouble or a short in the deck top plug?
All worked well, but this year the spring "test the lights leaves me with a dead anchor light.
Every spring I put together an extension wire with alligator clips so I can power the mast plug while mast is still horizontal. Steaming light good, no top light . Open up the housing, bulb falls apart in my hand..this is gonna be an easy fix! NOPE, new bulb ,nothing, multimeter at fixture , nothing, pull the male plug apart at bottom of mast, wiggle, tighten, fidget, nothing. Power is good at decktop female despite how ugly it is in the photos.So..sitting on my pickup bed, under the end of the mast sticking out over the bow..Hmm.
In the BIG picture, we are both pretty stressed right now with elderly parents, job issues, her retirement coming etc. Badly need this boat overboard soon to help relieve this!
I`ve decided that rewiring and lighting the mast will wait until the winter, I`ll leave the mast off the boat in the driveway next to it (another first)and plan and figure it out instead of rushing into a quickie repair job. I`m also gonna replace that decktop plug that will be it`s own special hell, I`m sure. We have decided this is the last boat, money and age restrict upsizing, so we`re gonna have it a long time and it`s worth doing this job right. I`m gonna research wiring, fixtures etc, figure it all out to start in the fall. I will be using a lantern up the pole for overnights this season, we only do 1 maybe 2 nights a season anyway.
Now the question: While poking around the deck plug with the multimeter, I established that the largest of the 4 prongs on the plug is the ground, with one hot for steaming light, one hot for anchor light and one unused. This is consistent with the information I have from Precision about the electric system.
What confuses me is that when I had the meter on ohms to check continuity, I had meter reading between the ground and all 3 of the other holes , even the unused one, this with all switches off inside. Does this indicate trouble or a short in the deck top plug?
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