I don't think that would be a good idea, boss. You're risking a fire doing that. The wiring leading to the fuze wouldn't be rated for 30 amps, and you risk a meltdown. I'm not 100% certain of this, but I'm pretty sure.
Quote from: jerseydevil on March 21, 2012, 03:03:45 AMI don't think that would be a good idea, boss. You're risking a fire doing that. The wiring leading to the fuze wouldn't be rated for 30 amps, and you risk a meltdown. I'm not 100% certain of this, but I'm pretty sure.I gotta agree with JD here about the wiring being rated and potential meltdown and fire thing happening. A pretty straightforward go around would be to run a wire right from the battery and use an inline fuse holder to power that pump. Just make sure everything on that line is rated for 30 amps, ie the power socket and any other attachments you would use.
I thinking that what you need is a proper upgrade:
If I understand you all right then it should be fine as long as it's a) independent of the current cigarette lighter wiring and b) has heavy enough wire to handle additional power.Would that be an accurate assumption?Def
Also ... if you're thinking of running high amp power from the front to rear of the car, increase the sizes of the cables further.
If you add a pre-made "bank" of lighter sockets check the individual rating of each outlet. While something like that may be rated at say 40 amps for four outlets, the manufacture might have come to that number by designing it at 10 amps per outlet
Breakers are easier as you if you do trip it by running too many sockets at capacity at once, just push a button and you're back up and running
I agree with everything everyone above has said Now check if the compressor has its own inbuilt fuse? If it has....Cut the cigaret plug off the lead, strip the wires back a bit and connect up to man sized crock clipsThen clip straight on to the battery terminals You can sort out your wiring another day
Something you can do Boss, if you are not going to need the outlet on a permanent basis, is along the lines of what Terry and Al have said. You could get a heavy duty marine outlet, add a nice length cord to it with alligator clips and an inline fuse. This way it can be as long and as heavy duty as you want, then when you are not using it you can roll it up and keep it in your tool box.Handy if you need power outside of the Jeep too
In fact, I'd sort of planned to do a few of them like that, only not alligator clipping them, but wiring them directly to the battery.Def
Just be mindful that a power leak can occur with this set up even with nothing connected...
Quote from: Santos on March 22, 2012, 02:37:05 PMJust be mindful that a power leak can occur with this set up even with nothing connected...This won't be a issue if the outlets are installed correctly