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Russell wrote:
Since my post a few days ago, spoke to our marine electrician and the on-staff electrical expert retained by the Harbor office. We are going to have to install an isolation transformer in our dock box. This will cost about $1,000 after parts, labor and some mods to the box. All 90 boats in our harbor that got the notices have to do this, move, or unplug or disconnect the AC ground from the DC, not a good option. So, now I see the West Advisor says that apparently solves the marina's issue with the AC, but unless we separate all the underwater stuff, like the through hulls, we still are subject to DC corrosion. Can this be true? What is the real solution to the AC, the DC, the safety and the corrosion problem? Is there one? We are one of 90 modest boats from about 28-48 feet, mostly 1970's through 1990's vintage. We all have to get these transformers now, but the issue is what else do we need to do once we are on the transformer? Well, the way this has happened concerns me, as I said before. That you are required to purchase the transformer makes the situation even worse (except for whoever is making a $90,000 sale). I know of no precedent for an action of this sort by a marina. It is really too bad, because it is fairly easy for an unskilled technician to determine which boat(s) are causing the problem. Regardless, the transformer will solve the corrosion problem ONLY if the secondary hot and neutral are connected to nothing on land. No grounding on land whatever. You then will use the neutral wire onboard as both neutral and ground. The corrosion problem I'm referring to is one in which an unprotected vessel near yours obtains protection from your zinc using the AC grounding conductor as the return path. There are obviously other corrosion problems, some quite serious, but the isolation transformer will do nothing to protect against those. You will still need a zinc to protect underwater props, etc., but that is almost always under your complete control. Except in very unusual circumstances, if you install proper sized zincs and check them from time to time, you should have no further corrosion problems. A technician can even show you how to make simple measurements to check on whether your protection system is working. To summarize: yes the transformer will completely eliminate what it appears is causing your corrosion problem based on what you have described. I don't believe the isolation transformer will introduce any new problems at all, other than the cost. Hope this helps, Russell. Good luck. Chuck ----== Posted via Newsfeeds.Com - Unlimited-Unrestricted-Secure Usenet News==---- http://www.newsfeeds.com The #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 120,000+ Newsgroups ----= East and West-Coast Server Farms - Total Privacy via Encryption =---- |
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Bad shore power | Cruising | |||
Isolation transformer and connection to ground | Electronics |