timskip
New Member
Does anybody know if the alternative to fitting a galvanic isolator to a steel boat moored in fresh water and hooked up to shore power is to run a good earth wire directly to an earth spike?
Does anybody know if the alternative to fitting a galvanic isolator to a steel boat moored in fresh water and hooked up to shore power is to run a good earth wire directly to an earth spike?
A good article, carry on reading to http://smartgauge.co.uk/galv_tran_02.html before making up your mind if the the GI is of any use to you at allThere is good info on the smartgauge website
http://smartgauge.co.uk/galv2.html
A good article, carry on reading to http://smartgauge.co.uk/galv_tran_02.html before making up your mind if the the GI is of any use to you at all
No its not an alternative. It would in fact increase the process of galvanic action.
A galvanic isolator actually goes in the earth line betwix boat & shore supply earth.
Exactly - the water you are floating in is already a pretty good earth - and that's the problem - the mains earth coming in on your shore power is often quite long and not as good an earth as the water is - it's that discrepancy between the mains earth and the earth path through the water that is responsible for the erosion of your anodes.
So you are suggesting that the water is a better earth than the earth conductor in the shorepower supply.
Would it therefore be better to simply use the anodes, skin fittings, stern gear or, in the case of a metal hull, the hull itself as the earth and not connect the shorepower earth to anything at all?
That does not seem to agree with expert advice or standards such as ISO 13297