Is it possible to test a bonding system for unwanted electrical current while the boat is out of the water? If so how? The bonding system contains several seacocks and the rudder skeg. Thanks! SC
Yes you can....My Marina Harbor Master has a neat yellow box about the size of a small suite case. It plugs into your dock side shore power outlet then you plug your shore power cord into it. Then a sensor is then dropped into the water around your boat. You shut down all systems down 12 dc as well as 120 ac breakers below. And then one by one you engage each system. As you engage each system a meter reading is taken and recorded.Is it possible to test a bonding system for unwanted electrical current while the boat is out of the water? If so how? The bonding system contains several seacocks and the rudder skeg. Thanks! SC
I believe you still can check for continuity ....All you have to do is connect the sensor to your thru hole fittings and the rigging ....In this case I would do each fitting separately recording each fitting. This should give you a good idea of how well all the bonding connections are made.Robert
No can do that method now - the boat is not in water.
Chas.
I don't see how that would give an accurate picture of what happens when the boat is in and all the myriad underwater metals are at different potential. It's the interactions that drive the causes.I believe you still can check for continuity ....All you have to do is connect the sensor to your thru hole fittings and the rigging ....In this case I would do each fitting separately recording each fitting. This should give you a good idea of how well all the bonding connections are made.
The short answer is you can test for some things, but not anything related to being in the water in a marina and plugged into shore power...Is it possible to test a bonding system for unwanted electrical current while the boat is out of the water? If so how? The bonding system contains several seacocks and the rudder skeg. Thanks! SC
Hi MaineSail! The concern has been these areas are all showing signs of corrosion. There is a circular pattern around the through hulls in the bottom paint (VC-17) which appears to be galvanic corrosion. I'm trying to locate the source of this current. I have been through the electrical system a few times but I'm obviously missing something. I'm wondering if a PO decided to use it as a ground or something. The corrosion is limited to these points only. My hope is to figure out a way to locate this issue before we splash for the Spring. If its impossible then it will wait. Shore power passes through an isolation transformer so right now I'm focused on my electrical system. SCThe short answer is you can test for some things, but not anything related to being in the water in a marina and plugged into shore power...
My questions would be;
*What is the actual concern?
*Do you have an issue when in the water?
*What are you trying to solve or fix?
Here is an idea .... So boat is on the hard right? Try this get your shore power cord out and plug into the boats outside shore power connection on the boat. Now with the free end of the cord and an Olms meter . Check the ground side first to all your thru hull fittings then check the white neutral and then the black. Start with everything on board in the off position first . Then just go down the line turning breakers on and off until you get a hit. Next then try the 12vdc side.sailcruiser said:Hi MaineSail! The concern has been these areas are all showing signs of corrosion. There is a circular pattern around the through hulls in the bottom paint (VC-17) which appears to be galvanic corrosion. I'm trying to locate the source of this current. I have been through the electrical system a few times but I'm obviously missing something. I'm wondering if a PO decided to use it as a ground or something. The corrosion is limited to these points only. My hope is to figure out a way to locate this issue before we splash for the Spring. If its impossible then it will wait. Shore power passes through an isolation transformer so right now I'm focused on my electrical system. SC
Ah ha, a big piece of the puzzle has just been ruled out.... Unless your IT is installed improperly, which is probbaly unlikely, then the issue is created on-board your boat (usually is).Shore power passes through an isolation transformer so right now I'm focused on my electrical system. SC
Isolation transformer is good. Some installs are wired for polarization only - not so good. Verify that safety green on the boat side is separate from safety green on the shore power side.
Thanks everyone. This problem existed before the IT was installed and present when we bought the boat. The battery charger is a Victron multistage (was ferro resonant), water heater is CNG, the IT is also Victron. There isn't an inverter on board. There is a macerater, and bilge pumps of course. All wiring in the bilge is contained by both wire ties and PVC used as conduit. It is a deep bilge and and I have never seen water come near the conduit (under the sole). The pumps are not deep in the bilge (also under the sole) but have long hoses. The auto switch however is. The spar hasn't appeared to be an issue but I may not have tested correctly either time I've checked.Isolation transformer is good. Some installs are wired for polarization only - not so good. Verify that safety green on the boat side is separate from safety green on the shore power side.
Hi Charles, all input is welcome. This has me VERY frustrated! A clincher DX would be um...supercalafragalisticexpealadocious! (My first choice wouldn't be appropriate for forum use.). I have spent weeks chasing this when I'd rather be sailing since the season is so short. To answer your questions:I am not Maine Sail but --
Are the halos white?
Are the metal through hulls painted with bottom paint?
Is the bottom paint black?
Do all the bonded items show the same halos?
Do any of the halos show bright green color (rare but if so quite significant.)
Answers will provide opportunity to give you a clincher diagnosis.
Charles
I will take a look at the edited post. The only anode on board is on the aluminum sail drive. It is magnesium collar being a fresh water boat. The PO did tell me the sail drive was pitted when he bought the boat but had a zinc anode which didn't offer much protection. He switched to magnesium which did get beat up badly. (He had the boat a year before selling to me.) The last thing I need is an out of production sail drive to be destroyed. I'm not aware of any anodes on the motor itself (Volvo md17c) but would suppose the sail drive offers some protection.Sailcruiser -
I added some information by editing my last post.
The additional items might help.
Bottom line -- your bonding cable needs to end at a zinc and you must make the motor block part of the bonded metal group. Make cable from motor block to bonding cables.
Charles