Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#5
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]() The wire, being copper, has a much greater potential for carrying current due to its electron shell. Electricity will always flow along the path of least resistance. Bonding your boat with copper wire will reduce the points of oppertunity for electrical conduction through the hull. It will also equalize stray current electrolysis, and lessen damage to your hull. It is especially important to make sure tramsmitters and antenna are properly bonded. -- Capt. Frank __c \ _ | \_ __\_| oooo \_____ ~~~~|______________/ ~~~~~ www.home.earthlink.net/~aartworks "CCred68046" wrote in message ... The amount of current the boat hull carries. I can get a ground from the hull, but I run a large wire to a terminal block with ground and power. OK. I can get a ground anywhere too. So are you saying that if everything is grounded seperately by a wire running back to the battery it will flow through the wire and not the boat? Mine is wired this way, but a lot of the electrical devices are mounted directly to the aluminum and will work without the ground wire. Is this because the wire has less resistance than the boat? Is the object here to keep the current at a minimum, Im sure SOME of it will always go through the hull just because of the motor and the electrical items attached to the boat. Is there anyway to test how much is going through the hull and what is considered a safe level? |