jfm
Well-Known Member
Thanks Mapis. If you ever find the PB article please post it.As I recall, I read a really techy explanation on why not bond everything together on Professional Boatbuilder, but that was some years ago and I can't find it online anymore.
Otoh, I found this article which also addresses your question, at least to some extent.
OK, Stan Honey set out a good reason not to bond seacocks. But let's be clear what he is saying. He is saying that IF you are in a marina that has stray DC current passing through the water, then bonding is not good becuase it provides a low resistance short cut for those currents with the result that the "out" skin fitting, the one a the end of the short cut, fizzes away. Now, if it were true, that would make good sense. But three comments:
1. I have no idea to what extent these "hot marinas" actually exist. Anyone know?
2. If he is right, prop shafts make for a much lower resistance "short cut" than a series of bonded seacocks, yet no-one sees anodic pitting at either end of their props shafts, sd they? This suggests the "short cut" theory is actually rare in practice.
2. He is not disputing that the multi-metal seacocks consist of little electrolysis cells themselves. And he is not disputing that one of the metals in the seacock must slowly fizz away as an anode. Her can't, because zillions of pages of science tells us that is so. Rather, he is implying that the corrosion in a hot marina is a worse evil than electrolytic corrosion within the seacock and so it is better to endure the latter to save yourself from the former.
Subject to my reservations in #1 and #2 above, his argument in #3 above makes sense. But please let's be clear that he is merely saying that the "stray current" evil, if it exists in your town, is a worse evil than electrolysis in unbonded seacocks. He is not disputing that bonding seacocks helps stop electrolysis in them. His advice not to bond applies only where there are stray currents.
I've no idea how you find out whether your marina has stray currents! Other than taking say 15m of cable, stripping the ends, and running it along your side deck with both ends immersed. Then looking to see if one end fizzes away.