Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#9
![]()
posted to rec.boats.cruising
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
brian whatcott wrote:
On 7/20/2010 10:10 PM, Stephen Trapani wrote: I lost a zinc on my prop shaft very quickly. My boat is moored with only one other boat within miles. The only possible source on my boat (I think) is the bilge switch in my bilge because it is the only thing on. The connection to the switch is out of the bilge water, so it can only be coming from the switch itself. I have a voltmeter. Is there any easy way to test to see if the switch is leaking current? Here's a quicky check: with no connection to shore power at all, find a meter with a sensitive current scale like 50 microamps. Find a lighting cord and connect the two wires at one end to the battery terminals. At the bilge, connect one battery lead to the meter and dangle the other meter lead in the water, preferably though a scrap of stainless sheet. Check the reading. Now connect the meter lead to the OTHER battery lead and dangle the other meter lead in the bilge again. If you normally leave the boat connected to shore power, repeat these two steps with shore power reconnected. Not a complete check, but it can catch many leaks. My apologies, but I don't understand. If I have both leads connected to the positive and negative battery terminals on one side, which one do I hook to the meter and which do I dangle in the water, and how would there then be one dangling from the meter into the water? Stephen |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Test: censor test warning some strong language | General | |||
test a bilge pump | General | |||
Adding an electrical bilge pump | Boat Building | |||
Adding an electrical bilge pump | Cruising | |||
electrical generator - out of an electrical trolling motor??? | Electronics |