I hear there are lot of opinions out there on grounding systems on boats, bonded or un-bonded, and failure to observe a consistent and well thought out protocol can have potentially dire consequences. My boat is a 1993 Hunter 375 and fortunately (or not...) I have the OEM grounding system where the engine block is connected via 0/2 wire to the neg DC battery. NOTE that this is not an “insulated return” found on some more modern boats, and recommended by Nigel Caulder in his excellent book "Boat Owners Mechanical and Electrical Manual". Starter motors, alternators, and so forth are, on this boat, mechanically and electrically connected to the engine block.
My OEM boat is not bonded, that is thru hulls and all underwater metals are electrically isolated, with zincs on the prop, prop shaft and shaft strut, since these are mechanically and electrically connected to the engine block. AC neutral or ground are NOT connected to, and have no continuity with, any DC ground or neutral or any underwater metals (I tested this). There is no voltage read between AC neutral and AC ground. I have neither galvanic isolator nor isolation transformer at this time.
I have some questions which I will get to, but here's what got me thinking... There are 3- 10g black wires connected to the keel bolts in the bilge. Recently, I disconnected these and tested continuity to trace them. With the wire disconnected from the keel bolts:
1. There is no continuity between the 10g black wires and negative 12vdc bus bar on the main distribution panels.
2. There is no connectivity between the mast and anything, (10g black wires, keel bolts, neg 12vdc, engine block)
3. There is electrical continuity between all keel bolts.
4. There is electrical continuity between the engine block and the keel bolts
a. The negative battery cable was connected to the engine block during the test.
5. There is, therefore, continuity between the keel bolts and 12vdc negative buss bar at the main distribution panel.
Nigel Caulder recommends physically separating the current carrying neg dc (ie…at the main distribution panel) from the non-current carrying “common ground” which provides a direct path to water via a ground plate. While the one is still connected to the other, the non-current carrying end is where he connects lightning protection, AC ground, radio ground plates etc., since this end of things is not involved in carrying current. Since the OEM arrangement in the 1993 Hunter 375 does not appear to be an "insulated ground" return system, but the keel bolts are electrically connected with the current carrying 12vdc negative (via the engine block), I wonder... was it Hunter's intention to create a common ground out of the keel bolts, similar to Caulder's recommendations?
If so, this raises a couple of questions...
1. Should I ground the mast to the keel bolts?
2. Are the keel bolts designed to be the “ground plate” to water? Or will they simply blow the keel off the boat if they are wired to absorb a lighting strike?
3. Is there another grounding plate (to water) built into the 1993 H375?
4. What do those black wires service? They do not have continuity to anything I can find...?
5. Would you recommend an Galvanic Isolator, or is this necessary with no inverter?
6. What would make the best place to connect an RF ground?
7. Shall I leave well enough alone and go sailing instead?
Inquiring minds want to know....
My OEM boat is not bonded, that is thru hulls and all underwater metals are electrically isolated, with zincs on the prop, prop shaft and shaft strut, since these are mechanically and electrically connected to the engine block. AC neutral or ground are NOT connected to, and have no continuity with, any DC ground or neutral or any underwater metals (I tested this). There is no voltage read between AC neutral and AC ground. I have neither galvanic isolator nor isolation transformer at this time.
I have some questions which I will get to, but here's what got me thinking... There are 3- 10g black wires connected to the keel bolts in the bilge. Recently, I disconnected these and tested continuity to trace them. With the wire disconnected from the keel bolts:
1. There is no continuity between the 10g black wires and negative 12vdc bus bar on the main distribution panels.
2. There is no connectivity between the mast and anything, (10g black wires, keel bolts, neg 12vdc, engine block)
3. There is electrical continuity between all keel bolts.
4. There is electrical continuity between the engine block and the keel bolts
a. The negative battery cable was connected to the engine block during the test.
5. There is, therefore, continuity between the keel bolts and 12vdc negative buss bar at the main distribution panel.
Nigel Caulder recommends physically separating the current carrying neg dc (ie…at the main distribution panel) from the non-current carrying “common ground” which provides a direct path to water via a ground plate. While the one is still connected to the other, the non-current carrying end is where he connects lightning protection, AC ground, radio ground plates etc., since this end of things is not involved in carrying current. Since the OEM arrangement in the 1993 Hunter 375 does not appear to be an "insulated ground" return system, but the keel bolts are electrically connected with the current carrying 12vdc negative (via the engine block), I wonder... was it Hunter's intention to create a common ground out of the keel bolts, similar to Caulder's recommendations?
If so, this raises a couple of questions...
1. Should I ground the mast to the keel bolts?
2. Are the keel bolts designed to be the “ground plate” to water? Or will they simply blow the keel off the boat if they are wired to absorb a lighting strike?
3. Is there another grounding plate (to water) built into the 1993 H375?
4. What do those black wires service? They do not have continuity to anything I can find...?
5. Would you recommend an Galvanic Isolator, or is this necessary with no inverter?
6. What would make the best place to connect an RF ground?
7. Shall I leave well enough alone and go sailing instead?
Inquiring minds want to know....