Welcome to Carver Yachts Owners Forum

We are a boating forum for owners of Carver Yachts to enthusiastically discuss all aspects of Carver Boat ownership. Whether you are looking for your first Carver or currently own one, you are sure to feel at home on CarverYachtOwners.com

You are currently viewing our board as a guest which gives you limited access to view most discussions, articles and access our other FREE features. By joining our free community you will have access to searching the forum topics, post topics, communicate privately with other members (PM), respond to polls, upload your own photos and access many other special features. Registration is fast, simple and absolutely free so please, join our community today!

2006 Carver 36 MY Generator use

Discussion of batteries, chargers, wiring, generators, distribution panels, battery switches, etc.
User avatar

Topic author United States of America
Cliffm
First Mate
First Mate
Posts: 160
Joined: September 27th, 2018, 6:21 pm
Vessel Info: 2006 Carver 36 MY
"the Condo"
VP 8.1Gi-F
Location: Renton WA
Has thanked: 260 times
Been thanked: 19 times

2006 Carver 36 MY Generator use

Postby Cliffm » December 17th, 2018, 2:43 pm

Hello, I'm looking for a definitive answer as to "best practice" for generator operation for A/C heat pumps.

Our current temporary moorage only allows a single 30amp connection, so we have been forgoing the A/C heat pumps, all three, and just using an efficient ceramic heater in main salon. we'r moving in January to a Marina w/50amp service.

I have read numerous posts here, along with the PDF Owners manual (we're fist time Carver Yacht owners, recently acquired) but i'm still confused If I can "safely" run 110V shore power on one panel and simultaneously run generator to run all three A/C units without issues on the other panel? The main panels switch is for AC power, but doesn't distinguish between Generator or shore power. Those "in-the-know" please advise.

What happens to the "un-used" A/C shore power cord ? is the cord "back-fed" and the connection end now "hot"? Do I need to get a cover for the shore side male end in order to "safely" to stow it under the stairs?

Thanks,
Cliff & Beth Mathison

User avatar

Canada
Midnightsun
CYO Supporter
CYO Supporter
Posts: 2924
Joined: March 27th, 2016, 2:27 pm
Vessel Info: The Midnight Sun
2007 41CMY
Volvo D6-370's
Location: Montreal, Canada
Has thanked: 268 times
Been thanked: 1153 times

Re: 2006 Carver 36 MY Generator use

Postby Midnightsun » December 17th, 2018, 3:31 pm

You could easily use just the central unit to heat off of shore power and skip the aux heater. Or select one at a time as required to distribute heat if you want, just don't run all 3 at the same time. My previous 32" boat had a single 16,000 BTU unit and everything worked fine with only a single 30a shore power hookup. Look at it this way, your energy efficient heater most likely needs a 15a breaker which is what your main AC unit needs also/ ;-)

As for shore power vs generator. You cannot function a combination of both. If you use the generator then shore power gets disconnected at the panel via the selector switch or sometimes automatically via an automated solenoid. Regardless of how it is done they are never combined. There is never any back feed to the exterior shore power prongs as the switching is done at the panel.
Cheers, Hans
2007 Carver 41 CMY
Twin Volvo D6-370's
Montreal, Canada
Midnight Sun I Photos
User avatar

Canada
bud37
Admiral
Admiral
Posts: 4865
Joined: April 23rd, 2015, 10:22 pm
Has thanked: 579 times
Been thanked: 1210 times

Re: 2006 Carver 36 MY Generator use

Postby bud37 » December 17th, 2018, 3:51 pm

If you have two shore power inlets to the boat, why not just run your one 30 cord and split it to both inlets....that way you can portion out your power until the move, they have adaptors for just that.....done it for years....
The above is strictly my opinion.
User avatar

Topic author United States of America
Cliffm
First Mate
First Mate
Posts: 160
Joined: September 27th, 2018, 6:21 pm
Vessel Info: 2006 Carver 36 MY
"the Condo"
VP 8.1Gi-F
Location: Renton WA
Has thanked: 260 times
Been thanked: 19 times

Re: 2006 Carver 36 MY Generator use

Postby Cliffm » December 17th, 2018, 4:08 pm

bud37 wrote:Source of the post If you have two shore power inlets to the boat, why not just run your one 30 cord and split it to both inlets....that way you can portion out your power until the move, they have adaptors for just that.....done it for years....

we have the adapter, it trips the 'old dock" wiring, with adapter on, both panels on, but no A/C on, we have power, but as soon as we enable (1) or (3) A/C units, the shore power breaker trips. Doesn't trip with panel one only and ceramic heater, unless hot water tank on and range on at same time.
This is what led to my plugged in but running genny question.
User avatar

United States of America
mjk1040
Admiral
Admiral
Posts: 1518
Joined: July 30th, 2015, 8:15 am
Vessel Info: 1998 355 AC/MY "Deja Vu"
Location: Savannah, NY
Has thanked: 9 times
Been thanked: 242 times

Re: 2006 Carver 36 MY Generator use

Postby mjk1040 » December 17th, 2018, 5:19 pm

Everything above is good info. It appears the shore power is somewhat inadequate. Glad your moving from this place I'll bet! Good Luck and I hope your new home is a better situation!
PS>I have also seen a bad neutral at the shore power supply give u tripping problems along with an inadequate amp supply at the shore power pedestal!
Last edited by mjk1040 on December 19th, 2018, 5:53 am, edited 1 time in total.
Mike :down:
I'd Rather Be Boating!
1989 Sea Ray Seville
1986 Carver Mariner 32'
1990's Thompson 22' Cuddy Cabin
1990's 4Winns 245 Vista Cruiser
1980's Thompson 19' Open Bow
User avatar

Canada
Midnightsun
CYO Supporter
CYO Supporter
Posts: 2924
Joined: March 27th, 2016, 2:27 pm
Vessel Info: The Midnight Sun
2007 41CMY
Volvo D6-370's
Location: Montreal, Canada
Has thanked: 268 times
Been thanked: 1153 times

Re: 2006 Carver 36 MY Generator use

Postby Midnightsun » December 17th, 2018, 5:20 pm

Cliffm wrote:Source of the post
bud37 wrote:Source of the post If you have two shore power inlets to the boat, why not just run your one 30 cord and split it to both inlets....that way you can portion out your power until the move, they have adaptors for just that.....done it for years....

we have the adapter, it trips the 'old dock" wiring, with adapter on, both panels on, but no A/C on, we have power, but as soon as we enable (1) or (3) A/C units, the shore power breaker trips. Doesn't trip with panel one only and ceramic heater, unless hot water tank on and range on at same time.
This is what led to my plugged in but running genny question.


I guess my question is what possibly could be consuming so many amps? I know for a fact a water heater and AC not to mention charger, lights, fridge can easily run off a single 30a breaker . That being said you will get a 50a connection after the move which is only 20a more than what you have now to run 3 units. Point is something is amiss. I have a feeling your 30a shore power breaker at the pedestal is actually a 20a or the breaker is old and performing like a 20A.
Cheers, Hans
2007 Carver 41 CMY
Twin Volvo D6-370's
Montreal, Canada
Midnight Sun I Photos
User avatar

Canada
bud37
Admiral
Admiral
Posts: 4865
Joined: April 23rd, 2015, 10:22 pm
Has thanked: 579 times
Been thanked: 1210 times

Re: 2006 Carver 36 MY Generator use

Postby bud37 » December 17th, 2018, 6:14 pm

I agree, something is up there, unless you have a ground fault with one appliance......but sounds to me like you are not getting all 30amps.
The above is strictly my opinion.
User avatar

United States of America
km1125
Admiral
Admiral
Posts: 3500
Joined: February 28th, 2017, 6:04 pm
Has thanked: 69 times
Been thanked: 1043 times

Re: 2006 Carver 36 MY Generator use

Postby km1125 » December 18th, 2018, 8:55 am

I'd turn the water heater breaker off and try it again with just one A/C units running. You only need the water heater to run periodically to get and keep hot water, just make sure you run it for a bit before you're ready to take a shower.

Often, it's just the compressor start-up spike that blows the breaker. Once you get past that, you could turn the water heater back on and let it run. I've thought about putting in a relay (contactor) that would disable the water heater when the A/C compressor is running as a way to run on a single 30A circuit, but still haven't implemented that.

Canada
Viper
CYO Supporter
CYO Supporter
Posts: 5975
Joined: July 10th, 2015, 9:58 pm
Vessel Info: 1989 Carver 3807 Aft Cabin
Location: Ontario, Canada
Has thanked: 455 times
Been thanked: 1671 times

Re: 2006 Carver 36 MY Generator use

Postby Viper » December 18th, 2018, 12:06 pm

I agree with all the above. You should also check the condition of your cord's plugs, the boat's inlets, and the shore power pedestal's outlet. Are there any signs around the contacts that they have overheated? If so, you may have a bad connection that is increasing the draw and tripping the breaker.
User avatar

Topic author United States of America
Cliffm
First Mate
First Mate
Posts: 160
Joined: September 27th, 2018, 6:21 pm
Vessel Info: 2006 Carver 36 MY
"the Condo"
VP 8.1Gi-F
Location: Renton WA
Has thanked: 260 times
Been thanked: 19 times

Re: 2006 Carver 36 MY Generator use

Postby Cliffm » December 30th, 2018, 7:54 pm

quick update:
moved to Elliott Bay Marina, twin 30A connections per slip. Plugged both cables in, powered up both panels, turned on all three AC units in auto mode (one at a time) took a bit but got interior up to 70F. It appears that running front stateroom blows into galley area, so we ran both aft and front stateroom AC units, with salon off and kept everything comfy and drawing only 10A.

Return to “Electrical”



Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 90 guests