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![]() chuck wrote: So are there any benefits to not having a capacitor? Maybe. There is no such thing as a galvanic AC current, I guess, but there can be an AC electrolytic current. Research suggests these currents may be even more damaging than DC currents. So from a corrosion perspective, it would be good to block them from getting into the boat's green wire. An isolator without a capacitor would at least block the lower-voltage AC, but would allow the higher-voltage AC to pass (once the 1.5 volt threshold was exceeded). So where is the benefit to adding the capacitor? None that I can see. The only ways to fully provide for onboard safety and also eliminate galvanic and electrolytic currents from traveling through the green wire are to use an isolation transformer, or don't bring shore power aboard. Usually, a simple galvanic isolator is sufficient. Regards, Chuck The AC currents are currents are all ready in your green wire from leaky equipment in your boat. These currents are making a complete circuit to where the grounding wire is connected to neutral on shore. The question is whether or not this happens through the grounding wire via the capacitor in the isolator or through a metal fixture on your boat, through the water, to ground, grounding rod, and then to neautral. The down side is if you have a capacitor and your neigbor doesn't than her AC currents might use your underwater parts and capacitor in your isolator as the shortest path to the neutral/ground connection point on shore. This is why ALL isolators should have a capacitor and I think ABYC may require one. If they don't they should. Or you could just spend the money and valuable space for an isolation transformer and not worry about it. Hope my point is better made than in the previous posting. Eric |
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