Victron 115/230V 2000W Isolation Transformer
SKU: 57764221260

Victron 115/230V 2000W Isolation Transformer

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Description

Victron 115/230V 2000W Isolation TransformerVictron 2000W Isolation Transformer: Complete Marine Electrical Safety Connecting your vessel to shore power introduces significant electrical challenges, primarily galvanic corrosion and grounding safety risks. The Victron 2000W 115 230V Isolation Transformer eliminates electrical continuity between AC shore power and your boat. By completely isolating your vessel from the shore ground, this system provides absolute protection against galvanic

Victron 2000W Isolation Transformer: Complete Marine Electrical Safety

Connecting your vessel to shore power introduces significant electrical challenges, primarily galvanic corrosion and grounding safety risks. The Victron 2000W 115/230V Isolation Transformer eliminates electrical continuity between AC shore power and your boat. By completely isolating your vessel from the shore ground, this system provides absolute protection against galvanic corrosion while ensuring that your onboard safety devices function correctly.

Prevent Galvanic Corrosion and Protect Your Hull

Galvanic corrosion occurs when two dissimilar metals are in electrical contact and exposed to a conductive fluid, such as seawater or freshwater. When a boat is connected to shore power, the shore earth wire connects the underwater metals of your boat to other boats and shore structures. This shared connection rapidly accelerates galvanic corrosion, dissolving sacrificial anodes prematurely and attacking vital metal components like your hull, propeller, and shaft.

While some marine setups rely on simple galvanic isolators, these do not provide true electrical separation. The Victron Isolation Transformer physically separates the shore power from your onboard system. The shore supply feeds the primary side of the transformer, and your vessel is powered entirely by the secondary side. This breaks the earth circuit completely, stopping galvanic corrosion at the source without compromising electrical safety.

Ensure Critical Grounding Safety

A common but highly dangerous workaround to stop galvanic corrosion is disconnecting the shore ground wire. If a short circuit occurs without a proper ground connection, safety devices like a Ground Fault Current Interrupter (GFCI) or Residual Current Device (RCD) will fail to trip, leading to severe electrical hazards.

This isolation transformer solves the problem by creating a safe, isolated neutral-to-earth bond on the secondary side of the transformer. By connecting all metal parts of your boat to this secondary neutral output, any short circuit will immediately trigger your GFCI or blow a fuse, keeping the vessel and its occupants completely safe. It also eliminates the need for complex polarity alarms.

Built-In Soft Start Technology

High-capacity transformers typically draw a massive inrush current when first connected, which can easily trip sensitive shore power circuit breakers. To counter this, Victron Energy has integrated an intelligent soft start feature into this model. The soft start system manages the initial power draw, ensuring a smooth connection to the shore supply without nuisance breaker trips, regardless of the marina's power quality.

Durable Hardware for Marine Environments

Designed specifically for demanding marine and off-grid environments, the unit is housed in a robust enclosure featuring the distinctive Victron Blue Power branding. It includes built-in recessed handles on the sides for secure manual lifting and positioning during installation. Protective black cable glands provide secure, strain-relieved electrical connections, preventing moisture ingress and ensuring long-term reliability in harsh coastal conditions.

Key Features and Benefits

  • Total Electrical Isolation: Completely separates shore power from the vessel supply.
  • Corrosion Prevention: Eliminates the earth loop that causes severe galvanic corrosion.
  • Enhanced Safety: Ensures proper operation of onboard RCDs, GFCIs, and fuses.
  • Soft Start Protection: Prevents shore power breakers from tripping due to high inrush currents.
  • Flexible Voltage Handling: Engineered to support both 115V and 230V configurations.
  • Marine-Grade Construction: Durable enclosure with recessed lifting handles and secure cable glands.

Protect Your Investment Today

Upgrading to a true isolation transformer is the most effective method to safeguard your hull from corrosion and protect your electrical system from grounding faults. Equip your marine electrical system with the Victron 2000W 115/230V Isolation Transformer to ensure reliable, safe shore power connectivity wherever you dock.

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SKU: 57764221260

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Jack Lechelt
Chelsea, US
★★★★★ 4
Excellent and thorough
This must be the definitive history of voting in America. I hold back from giving it five stars because it was a little more than what I was looking for, but this is as thorough as I have ever come across. Also, I love charts and graphs, and he has a great array of tables at the end. Interesting tidbit was the role war played throughout American history in expanding the right to vote. Also, though we all know how the right to vote gradually expanded, but what many of us didn't realize was how the right to vote actually shrunk at various points in American history. That is, some people who had the right to vote had it taken away at various moments in American history. When all is said and done, this is a great book.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on December 18, 2007
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William A. Blackwell
Lexington, US
★★★★★ 5
read!
Format: Kindle
I had to read this book for a political theory class, and I thoroughly enjoyed it. Keysarr did a great job of researching and writing it. It was not as dry as some of the other, similar books I've read. I would definitely recommend this one, even if it's not for a class.
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Reviewed in the United States on April 26, 2014
T
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Tim Olson
Belleville, US
★★★★★ 5
Excellent Book
Format: Kindle
Detailed exhaustively researched history of the right to vote in America. I learned more from this book than any other source.
WAS THIS REVIEW HELPFUL?YesReportShare
Reviewed in the United States on February 24, 2021
H
Verified Purchase
How Family
Birmingham, US
★★★★★ 5
Great reference for college US History I & Ii.
Format: Paperback
My college course references this book for US History I & Ii at Temple College in Texas.
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Reviewed in the United States on June 21, 2022
P
Alexandria, US
★★★★★ 4
A useful study
Format: Hardcover
This is a book that will make you angry. If you are a conservative, this book should make you feel very guilty. It is important to begin with that this book is a detour from Keyssar's larger project, which was supposed to be a history of the American working class' electoral participation. After struggling with the work for several years he realized that he needed to publish a whole book explaining what the right to vote actually was in American history. The result is a history of the slow and uneven path to universal suffrage in American history. We learn about the existence of the vote before 1776, the improvement that occured with the revolution, and the larger improvement that occured with the Jeffersonian/Jacksonian period in which the large majority of white men were able to vote. At the same time we learn of efforts to counter the expanding suffrage, such as disfranchisement of free blacks all over the country before 1861, attacks on the voting rights of paupers, felons, migrants and aliens, as well as the disfranchisment in the early 1800s of the limited voting rights women had in the early 1800s. Keyssar then goes on to discuss the narrowing of the portals from the 1860s to the 1920s, periods ironically bounded by giving the vote to blacks in the 1870s and to women by the 1920s. But in between that period nearly all blacks and many whites were disenfranchised in the south, while literacy, residence, nationality and registration systems sought to limit the vote in the North (while "asiatics" were barred in the west). The book concludes with the successful passage of the Voting Rights Act and the twenty-sixth amendment, but also with low turnout, an extremely narrow political spectrum, and government structures which limit political participation and reinforce conservative values. Much of this will not be new to historians, though never before has there been such detail and the twenty appendixes provided at the back will be invaluable for future reference. Sometimes Keyssar gives a qualititative estimate of how many Americans could vote (he suggests that perhaps 60% of white Americans could vote before 1776, a figure much lower than the 80-90% posited by more Panglossian historians). And there are many interesting details, such as the New York plan where registration was supposed to take place on Yom Kippur, conventiently leaving out many Jews. But otherwise the full results have been reserved for his upcoming work. This weakens his criticisms of American exceptionalism, since without a clear understanding of how much the vote declined in the North, we cannot see how fully the ponderous elitism of Parkman and Godkin were like the undemocratic aspects of German or Italian or even British liberalism. I am also do not agree with his description of slaves as a "peasantry." This implies that the majority of white farmers who were not slaveholders were a) not peasants and b) were otherwise indistinguishable on a class basis from the slaveholders. Recent southern agrarian history makes this assumption quite questionable. It is true that Americans were unenthusiatic as Europeans about the rise of the proletariat and rural subaltern classes, but it is insufficient to say that mass suffrage only occured because such classes were a small proportion of the population. They were also a small proportion of the population in France in 1848 and 1851 when universal male suffrage was declared, which did not prevent a greater degree of struggle over the question in that country. Enfranchising the majority of any population would raise serious issues of class domination and control regardless of the class structure. Nevertheless this is still a useful study, and reading the petty, racist, misogynist, self-serving and self-satisfied arguments against the suffrage will be a depressing experience. To think that such injustices could be continued for two centuries thanks to the endless cant of "state's rights" long after the republican content of that slogan had drained away will infuriate you.
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Reviewed in the United States on October 18, 2000

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