Jump to content

Electrical advice


smashweights

Recommended Posts

Here's my situation: I've got the Duc stored in a detached garage that only has a light bulb socket for power. I was gonna pull the battery, but after about an hour of hacking my way to the ill-conceived battery location, I gave it up. The bike already has a quick disconnect for a battery tender installed, so I'm wondering: I have a 2-prong socket adapter in the light socket and an extension cord running down to plug things in, but the Battery Tender needs a 3-prong. Is it gonna be safe to buy a 2-prong to 3-prong adapter and run the battery tender for a few hours once a week to keep the battery topped off? Obviously the ground connection wouldn't be connected... The other option is could I ground the adapter to something like the garage door metal and would that make it serviceable?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

If the charger has a metal case then the ground actually does something. If it has a plastic case then 2-prong will be fine.

If you want to connect the ground then do it correctly - take out the light housing and check to see if there is a ground wire in there.

If so, option 1 is to wire up a double-outlet in the recessed box, then get a light that you can plug into the other outlet.

Option 2, IF you can get to the knockouts on the side of the box, is to run another wire to another box you install, and put an outlet there.

Don't improvise a ground - if you need it, you need to do it right.

Edited by Scruit
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Grounding is very important, but you can probably get away without one in your application. Heck I have done work on farms where its scary with all the stray voltages everywhere because they do not have good grounded systems. Most of the old homes were without grounds. Knob and tube wiring was groundless. Its better and safer overall with a ground, but in your case I wouldn't worry too much about it.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Not being a duesh but if it has a metal case it does what? Allows for a path back to the service panel IF there's a problem rather than a different path such as your arm?

That's what I meant by "if it has a plastic case then 2-prong will be fine" Is there's a short to the case in a plastic case then you won't get fried. Metal case has to be grounded - that's just common sense. ;)

Another option is to buy a battery tender that already has a 2-prong plug. $20 later, you're finished, no wiring.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

I have an old Craftsman electric drill that has a metal body on it, and a two prong plug.

It's older than most people on this forum.

It will regularly shock the shit out of you.

(I learned to wear gloves.)

And this is after repeated rebuilds to get it to stop doing that.

I should bring it along some day. We could have fun electrocuting each other.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

That's what I meant by "if it has a plastic case then 2-prong will be fine" Is there's a short to the case in a plastic case then you won't get fried. Metal case has to be grounded - that's just common sense. ;)

Another option is to buy a battery tender that already has a 2-prong plug. $20 later, you're finished, no wiring.

Good. Just making sure you weren't a ground nazi basing things off of fear and bologna.

Got a few old metal drills like that. They keep you sharp.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Thanks for the suggestion, Scruit. I hadn't even thought to look for a 2-pronged charger, in spite of the fact that it's a ridiculously simple solution... Going to return the Battery Tender Plus I ordered from Amazon and pick up a NOCO Genius charger that uses a 2-pronged plug. Should have thought of that first!

http://www.amazon.com/NOCO-G1100-Automatic-Battery-Maintainer/dp/B004LX3AXQ/ref=cm_cmu_pg__header

Link to comment
Share on other sites

We do realize that nothing would happen unless there's a problem? Do we realize they sell millions of those little grey adapters and hardley no one ever connects the little ring to the outlet screw? The advice above is sound but a little over paranoid.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Yeah. Unless you plan on keeping your tender in a bucket of salty water or urinating on it frequently the ground probably isn't needed, it just gives the electricity a pathway to...you guessed it the ground in there is a short between the guts and the metal body. If something goes wrong inside there and shorts out bad enough to the outlet it will trip the breaker anyway but I seriously wouldn't worry about it, its taking 110 v 20 amp AC service and stepping it down to 12 v .5 amp DC. Just don't rub your balls against the case after soaking it in piss and you should be ok.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You can post now and register later. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

×
×
  • Create New...