🔋 Stay Charged, Stay Connected!
The Blue Sea Systems 1016 Dual USB Charger Socket is a versatile and efficient charging solution designed for 12/24V systems. With a maximum output of 2.1A and dual USB ports, it ensures your devices are powered up quickly and reliably. Its compact design and lifetime warranty make it a must-have for any tech-savvy individual on the move.
Item Package Dimensions L x W x H | 5.9 x 2.7 x 1.7 inches |
Package Weight | 0.09 Kilograms |
Item Dimensions LxWxH | 1.7 x 2.7 x 6.5 inches |
Item Weight | 3.04 ounces |
Brand Name | Blue Sea Systems |
Warranty Description | Lifetime |
Model Name | Blue Sea Systems 12/24V 2.1A DC Dual USB Charger Socket |
Color | 12/24V 2.1A, Black |
Material | Plastic |
Suggested Users | unisex-adult |
Number of Items | 1 |
Manufacturer | Blue Sea Systems |
Part Number | 1016-BSS |
Style | USB Charger |
Included Components | USB Charger |
J**N
Works perfectly, but fast charging not available on all devices
The Blue Sea USB outlet is easy to install, durable, and corrosion resistant. It is meant to be installed on a belowdecks panel, not on a a console exposed to weather. The rubber flap closes things up and protects it from spray, but I wouldn't trust it in very wet conditions, and if it is not closed properly, any amount of sea water ingress will destroy it. Fast charging is automatically engaged for those devices configured to trigger it; it charges my iPhone from dead to 100% in just over an hour, and my iPad in about 2 hours. Other devices that don't trigger fast charging mode are much slower; I have a bluetooth speaker that takes 4 or 5 hours to charge, for example. Its size is perfectly suited for installation into the hole of a standard AC wall socket, or the hole for a cigarette lighter style socket, or you can use the included bezel to install it on a panel. Everywhere I need USB charging, I only use the Blue Sea outlet; so far I have 4 of them on my 2 boats, and I intend to install more.
J**K
Nice USB Charger socket!! Always keeps charging and has nice indicator light
A few years ago I ordered a Blue Sea Systems Panel SCK USB & Volt (D) panel and unit performed as advertised.In particular, the 1016 Dual USB Charger Socket which was part of the panel is especially nice USB socket. I hooked a 1016 up to an external battery and now have a continuous USB charging voltage for my USB gismos.Most USB battery backup banks apparently stop supplying the required USB voltage to charge your USB gismso, so if you have a remote application, as soon as the USB item requiring to be charged is fully charged, the battery bank shuts down to conserve its charging status.With a combination of the Blue Systems 1016 Dual USB Charger Socket and a small external AGM battery, I get days of continuous USB power in very remote locations.Ended up using the 1016 Dual USB Charger Socket to continuolsly power up a very remote wifi hotspot to serve as a hotspot for solar wifi webcams.This allows for continuous remote monitoring of nature related observations. :-)Very happy with the Blue System 1016 Dual USB Charger Socket and can recommend it as a dependable USB charging outlet
V**N
Well made, hoping it performs as good as it looks.
I purchased this unit for our family boat. Like many typical families everyone has a smart phone, but only my phone gets plugged into the stereo and is charging while we're boating. Often times kids and friends ask me to disconnect my phone, but then I loose the use of my navigation app and it's a pain having people reach over me while I'm operating the boat so they can see their notifications.To solve this problem I started looking for a USB charger on Amazon and found this device. Installation location was the key to making this thing valuable. I didn't want another place for people to try and charge their phones where it was in the way, and I didn't want them out in the open hopefully encouraging them to enjoy the boat versus blue facing. I installed the device in the glove box area on the port side of the boat. When someone wants to use the charger they can put their phone in the glove box, and then close it to keep it safe and dry while it charges.Installation was pretty easy, drill a big hole and wire it up to 12V. I'm just hoping it works correctly and doesn't short out. Taking a long trip with the boat so I'll report if it works anything less than perfect.
L**S
Excellent, quality product. Great Value and a fast charge for my phone
With two ways to mount (with or without bezel) and a simple two wire connection to power and ground, it is simple to hook up. I mounted mine inside the glove box on the boat. The only issue I had was finding a 30mm hole saw; best i could find locally was a 1 1/4" hole saw, so the hole was slightly too large. But, the mounting bezel covered the gap, no problem. It can be mounted in materials from 1/8 thick to over an inch thick. At 5 volts and 2 amps+ on each terminal, this power supply charges my iPhone in about 2 hours from dead and the iPad about 4 hours from dead. The nicest benefit is that I will never have to worry about conserving my phone battery while I'm out on my boat all day.
E**E
My sample is quite good
First, the unit I received appears to be exactly as listed. It is not a 12V power jack with a USB power adapter stuck in it. The USB ports and power converter itself is a black conformal coated module within the cylinder you see and mount. For marine environment use this coating is important as there is no other good way to moisture proof electronic circuits short of hermetically sealing them and using water proof input and output connectors. So except for the exposed connector contacts on the unit, salt air should not have much negative effect on long term reliability.I bought this to power the Bluetooth to RS232 adapter on my race car's Megasquirt ECU and the Nexus10 tablet that I use for the instrument cluster on the same car. The Nexus would not charge at above 500ma with this power port until I shorted the data pins together on one of the USB jacks as described by Mr Borosky. I have had to do this on a number of USB power ports to get more than 500ma. There is a recent USB charge port power spec that calls for devices connected to the charge port to simply increase current draw until the USB voltage drops under 5V in order to find and use the most amperage such a charge port can supply, but I dont own any that do this yet, but I have a couple Android devices that detect the shorted data pins.I power this USB power port (and thus the Nexus and Bluetooth adapter) separately from the ignition ON switch in the race car to reduce the time needed to have fully functional instruments upon engine startup. Because starter current demand during engine cranking will drop available battery voltage, and I use the smallest (and lightest) battery I can afford that will start the car, I wanted to know how well this power port would ride thru voltage sags during this time. I found the port will remain fully functional at input voltages down to 6V and the USB port outputs remain a steady 5V until the input voltage drops to close to 5V. Based on observing regulator switching noise on the power input, it appears the port drops out of switched regulation and into what must be linear regulation below about 7.5V because the switching noise on the input power wire completely disappears (and the green LED goes off, but the regulated 5V output continues unaffected until the input drops below 6V. This performance is more than adequate as my system voltage on the car does not drop below 9V during cranking if my battery has a decent charge. It also appears pretty robust in my view since some similar I have seen shut down at 9V and the outputs drop to zero volts.Because I have a number of unshielded analog sensor signals connected to the ECU and am using Bluetooth to connect the ECU with the Nexus/instrument cluster I was concerned about generated electrical noise from the unit, either radiated from the unit into the air or from the 5V outputs or 12V input. I found no discernable noise on the 5V outputs as seen on a 350MHz o'scope or radiated into air based on a handheld 140M-900MHz amateur radio transceiver set to scan that range (actually multiple bands in that range with some frequencies that are not tuneable). The 12V power input exhibits a 300KHz triangle wave with some 1MHz short duration ringing syncronized to the triangle peaks. The 300KHz triangle wave is under .2V p-p and the 1MHz ringing is under .4V p-p. Under some combinations of input voltage (7.5-15V) and load (0 to 1A tested) the ringing and triangle wave decreases or disappear entirely. At least one reviewer wrote that his sample was producing enough noise on the 5V outputs that the radiated noise interfered with reception on his marine radio. Based on how mine behaves, I would have to guess his was defective or a different product than the one I have. I found that a medium sized clip-on ferrite with the power wire passing thru and a 6800uf 25V electrolytic between the power port input terminals eradicated this from the 12V wire back to the power switch.
C**E
Nice
Works
G**E
MERCI
OK
D**.
Blue Seas
Blue Seas is my number 1 choice for marine applications, a top quality product .
A**R
Four Stars
Works great installed it on my kayak. Powers my go pro off my fish finder battery
S**R
Glad I paid the extra and got Blue Sea
Well built. Works great. Worth the extra bit of cash versus the knockoffs. Wish I had bought Blue Sea for BOTH sides of the bed now... Knockoff on my side. Sadness.
Trustpilot
1 day ago
1 week ago