Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#3
![]()
posted to rec.boats.electronics
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On May 14, 10:02 am, Chuck wrote:
b393capt wrote: On my 39 foot Beneteau 393, I have a zinc fish connected to engine ground via a stud I installed in my cockpit. When I place an analog meter between the fish and the boat's ground, I read 50 mA with most of my electrics off (except Link20, galvanic isolator monitors, bilge pumps), 70mA with some DC power on, and 100mA if I also connect to shore power (I have galvanic isolators, unsure why the current should change) Where is a reference I can go to, to learn is this is acceptable ? E.g. where do I cross the line between this providing evidence I am getting intended galvanic protection vs. evidence there is a problem ? Thank, Several things come to mind. First, is the fish your only zinc anode? Assuming it is, and assuming you are measuring DC milliamperes (not AC), then 50 mA is probably high, depending on the surface areas, distance from the fish, and composition of the underwater metals you are protecting. A direct current of 50 mA will typically consume a pound of zinc in about 3 months. I also assume you are in sal****er. Applying DC power to various appliances should not change the current through the fish. The only thing that I can think of to explain what you are seeing is if the switches are switching both positive and negative wires. Of maybe something is wired "backwards" and sets up a galvanic cell. You should see no significant difference with AC power connected if your isolator is working properly. It is not clear how this would be related to the increased fish current when DC appliances are switched on. I'm having trouble imagining what could cause all the symptoms you have reported. And coincidental multiple problems are usually suspect. The best references are probably the two 12 Volt Doctor books by Edgar J. Beyn. Remarkably lucid and useful. BTW, when measuring the current, was the negative lead connected to the zinc or the engine stud? And was your reading + or - 50 mA? Good luck. Chuck ----== Posted via Newsfeeds.Com - Unlimited-Unrestricted-Secure Usenet News==----http://www.newsfeeds.comThe #1 Newsgroup Service in the World! 120,000+ Newsgroups ----= East and West-Coast Server Farms - Total Privacy via Encryption =----- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Chuck, On my 39 foot Beneteau 393, I have a zinc fish connected to engine ground via a stud I installed in my cockpit. When I place an analog meter between the fish and the boat's ground, I read 50 mA with most of my electrics off (except Link20, galvanic isolator monitors, bilge pumps), 70mA with some DC power on, and 100mA if I also connect to shore power (I have galvanic isolators, unsure why the current should change) Where is a reference I can go to, to learn is this is acceptable ? E.g. where do I cross the line between this providing evidence I am getting intended galvanic protection vs. evidence there is a problem ? Thanks, Chuck, 1) I have an anode on my prop, the boat was just splashed two weeks ago, so hopefully it's still there! Last year it dissapeared completely. 2) Has to be DC mA, when I am not connected to shore power. 3) Yes, Salt water environment 4) Battery switch is positive wire only. I have a starter and a house battery, both turn on/off simulateously. 5) I believe the negative meter leed was connected to my engine, but will recheck tonight. Dan |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Testing effectiveness of zincs | Boat Building | |||
SSB Antenna theory | Electronics | |||
Notes on short SSB antennas, for Larry | Cruising | |||
Notes on short SSB antennas, for Larry | Electronics | |||
The problem with these off-topic, political threads... | General |