Malabarista
Well-Known Member
Hello again everybody.
After what feels like a hundred year project i have finally taken the battery bay from temporary status to fully operational. Amazingly it all seems to work. I am however stuck in analysis paralysis over one cable. It’s the case earth from the Sterling battery charger. I have it on a 35mm cable running to the common DC earth ( taken from the engine block). It makes me a little nervous as it’s the only 240VAC/12VDC interface for accidentally connecting both through earth leakage. I know ( or I think i do) that it needs to be able to handle a dc fault with high amps. Hence the 35mm cable. It also needs to be able to trip at the consumer unit on the AC circuit and so needs an earth to the “vehicle chassis”. My questions are;
Can I connect it to the anode which is only serving the ‘P’ bracket at the moment? This would mean a run of about 2m and no connection (inside the boat) to the DC circuit.
Should I just leave it where it is ( a run of about 500mm) and find something else to worry about?
I have seen a couple of installations where it is not connected at all to anything and their systems work ok.
Could anyone please help me with my indecisión?
Many thanks
After what feels like a hundred year project i have finally taken the battery bay from temporary status to fully operational. Amazingly it all seems to work. I am however stuck in analysis paralysis over one cable. It’s the case earth from the Sterling battery charger. I have it on a 35mm cable running to the common DC earth ( taken from the engine block). It makes me a little nervous as it’s the only 240VAC/12VDC interface for accidentally connecting both through earth leakage. I know ( or I think i do) that it needs to be able to handle a dc fault with high amps. Hence the 35mm cable. It also needs to be able to trip at the consumer unit on the AC circuit and so needs an earth to the “vehicle chassis”. My questions are;
Can I connect it to the anode which is only serving the ‘P’ bracket at the moment? This would mean a run of about 2m and no connection (inside the boat) to the DC circuit.
Should I just leave it where it is ( a run of about 500mm) and find something else to worry about?
I have seen a couple of installations where it is not connected at all to anything and their systems work ok.
Could anyone please help me with my indecisión?
Many thanks

