patrick_g
Elite Member
Eddie. Why was I not surprised in the least when I read of your PROFESSIONAL SOLUTION that leveraged a little up-front work and reaps continuing rewards for years?
LB: As regards clamping the batt charger and pump clamps to lag bolts. That is a practical shortcut. You can still get sparks if there is any vibration or the cables are disturbed but they are not right at the worst of any fuel fumes. Diesel is really safe but if I were pumping gasoline I'd want a good separation between "temp" style connectors and any gasoline or its fumes.
You just never know when a low probability unexpected event may occur. We had a good blow come through here and the lid to one of my RubberMaid battery boxes blew off and it got a few inches of rain in it. It was not housing a battery but a battery charger maintaining a battery on a powerful fence charger. I pulled it out of the water by the AC cord and amazingly it was still working although there was some AC leakage to the case. I replaced the weight on the lid with a full cinder block, so maybe the wind won't blow it away.
Pat
LB: As regards clamping the batt charger and pump clamps to lag bolts. That is a practical shortcut. You can still get sparks if there is any vibration or the cables are disturbed but they are not right at the worst of any fuel fumes. Diesel is really safe but if I were pumping gasoline I'd want a good separation between "temp" style connectors and any gasoline or its fumes.
You just never know when a low probability unexpected event may occur. We had a good blow come through here and the lid to one of my RubberMaid battery boxes blew off and it got a few inches of rain in it. It was not housing a battery but a battery charger maintaining a battery on a powerful fence charger. I pulled it out of the water by the AC cord and amazingly it was still working although there was some AC leakage to the case. I replaced the weight on the lid with a full cinder block, so maybe the wind won't blow it away.
Pat