Expletive Electrolysis

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Stephan
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Expletive Electrolysis

Post by Stephan »

Part of the 4th of July celebration included a swim. So after playing around I donned my mask and went for a look around the running gear. After 1 month in the water everything was still very clean but I was struck with the amount of degradation to the zincs (all marked “American Made” from boatzincs.com). The shaft zincs (2 eggs on each shaft) were well pitted and the rudder zincs were pitted with a halo of “burnt” paint around the zinc. The zincs on the shafts were uniformly degraded as were the rudder zincs and both rudders evidenced the burnt paint. I did not see degradation or burnt paint on the thru-hulls, struts- or the engine intake strainers.
The bonding system is, I believe the original strap with much more recent 10-8 gage wire with un-sealed crimp ring ends. While none of it is up to bertram31.com levels and there are some connections with green fuzz my opinion (danger… danger) was that it didn’t look so bad.
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Also, it did seem to perform last year. Over the course of a five month season in 2010 the shaft zincs materially depleted with partial wearing the rudder zincs (no paint burn). The boat is on the same mooring as last year, 50’ from the nearest vessel and 500’ from the nearest shore power. The boat normally spends moored time with all battery switches set to “off” and a separate circuit which feeds the 3 bilge pumps always hot.
Here’s what’s changed from last year:
The rudders were removed and stripped this last winter and painted with 2 coats of Primocon (spray) and three thin coats of Trilux 33 (brushed) with bare metal under the zinc. The rudders are bonded by a machine screw taped into the head of the rudder shaft.
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The shore power wiring and breakers were removed from the boat as well as a TruCharger and pair of busses which previously serviced a tower with lighting, radar and loran. I removed the shore power because I have no use for it and didn’t want -after several seasons of not using it to have someone “try it out”. The tower, loran, etc. were removed several seasons ago before I purchased the boat.
In the –for what it’s worth department- I do have an isolator between the port alternator and the house battery switch and the boat did spend 1 week with the battery switches left in the “all” position but the circuit breakers turned off.
I would like very much to redo the bonding system over the coming winter… not right now if I can avoid it. What are the most effective steps I should take right now?
Thanks in advance,
Stephan
Possunt quia posse videntur
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In Memory of Vicroy
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Post by In Memory of Vicroy »

Does not sound that bad to me - the zincs are there to be eaten up instead of the good stuff. Your bonding connections look fine to me, the green stuff is normal and a shot of CX will take care of it quickly. Your rudder bonding idea is a good one that all of us should copy when the rudders are out.

The uniform degrading of the zincs indicates your bonding system is intact and working as intended. Dissimilar metals imersed in water (especially salt water) form a neat little battery that is hell bent on plating the more noble metals with the less noble, and zinc is below most others on the periodic table of "noble-ness".

Sounds to me like you are good to go, just keep an eye on the zincs and change 'em when they get to the point they are about to fall off.

UV
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CaptPatrick
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Mikey
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Post by Mikey »

Green good. Red bad.
Like Vic says, a shot of CX on ALL electrical connections is an annual must, including all the connections on the bonding system.
Mikey
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Sean B
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Post by Sean B »

Below I copied my old post from the 33 site, on how to test your zinc levels. I went through this business myself a few years ago. Good luck, it can be quite a process to figure out what is wrong.

In my case with a 1987 B33, I found that I needed bonding system work, a new galvanic isolator, and (finally) that the sailboat next to me was throwing stray currents.

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You need a high-quality digital multimeter, and very long ~10' leads. Use the resistance setting, which requires that there is a battery in the multimeter. Touch the leads together, and it should read resistance as zero Ohms (use knob or whatever it has to adjust to zero if it not). Then touch the lead to any 2 metal parts on the boat, and you should read zero or near-zero resistance between them.

If not, the grounding is no good on between whatever 2 things you touched the leads to. That's the only way to know the bonding system is okay. I had plenty of wires that looked just fine, but when tested they weren't grounded, or worse, were only partially grounded with significant resistance, due to the wire getting crunchy and old inside the original factory crimp connectors, or due to corrosion at the contact lug. As I understand it, it's better for them to be completely ungrounded than to have any sort of partial connection.

Start at the zincs, if there is a contact point inside, and check connection to the copper grounding strips on each side of the boat, on the inside faces of the large stringers. Check the connection between the shaft or engine to the copper strips. After establishing that your zincs are connected to your grounding strips, check that each thru-hull, sea strainer, rudders, struts, et cetera are all connected to the copper bonding strips with zero resistance.

Basically check anything metal that is in contact with water. In my boat some non seawater-wet things are grounded too, like the rub rails, stainless rails, outriggers and fresh water tank. Not sure why but I don't know everything either. Maybe for lightning or static charges.

If you have everything already well grounded then consider yourself lucky, and it would be a simple matter to add a transom zinc if you want extra protection from corrosion. I added one. I used to throw over a zinc fish clipped to a strut bolt before that, before my bonding system work began, and the thing disintegrated noticably over a period of weeks. I also had a stray current near me and a bad galvanic isolator (more on this later).

Interesting thing about the ship's bonding system is that if in good shape the zincs last longer, maybe for years. Bad grounding means stray currents that eat up your zincs, then go to work on whetever other metals you have (like your rudders and props).

This sounds like a lot of work but it reallys isn't... unless your bonding system needs to be completely re-worked like mine did, in which case YES you have a big job on your hands. To do it right the genny has to come out too, more bad news.

Once everything is grounded okay, then you want to take it to the next step: determine if you have enough zincs, or if you have too much zinc (yes it is possible). Then find out if you have stray currents lurking about that come from leaky electrical sources - either your boat, or a neighbor's boat, or from your marina. Only after eliminating all these things can you be sure you are okay.

This procedure to test it is below. Note that this can be done at any time, for any piece of metal on your boat... but if your grounding system is not right then you are only checking that one piece of ungrounded metal, not the whole boat.

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You'll need a corrosion electrode, I got mine here: http://www.boatzincs.com/corrosion-refe ... specs.html, a good-quality digital multimeter, and a few spare hours.

You should also get and read Nigel Calder's Boatowner's Mechanical & Electrical Manual , it is the absolute bible for this stuff.

Turn everything off and disconnect the shore power cord. A vessel’s bonding system should have with a DC voltage between -900 mV and -1100 mV (relative to a silver/silver-chloride electrode) to properly protect underwater metals from galvanic corrosion.

Readings less than -900 mV indicate the cathodic protection system is weak and/or failing. Your bonding system is not working, or/and you do not have enough zincs.

Readings higher than -1150 mV indicate overprotection, a situation that could damage underwater steel, aluminum alloys and wooden thru-hull backer plates. If you get this condition then you have too many zincs - remove some.

After taking an un-hooked reading, start by hooking up the shore power and take another reading. Then start turning on things on the boat one by one, all while watching the readings as you go. Readings that change dramatically as you turn electrical circuits on or off indicate a problem with that particular circuit or component. Do this again with the genny running. Check everything, DC and AC, and actually turn on your radios and chartplotters too.

If the voltage reading changes when you hook up the shore power cord then you are getting stray currents from the marina's leaky power grid via. your shore power cord ground wire, through your boat's underwater metals, to the seawater and finally to the ground. This is a very common condition and cause for quick loss of zincs and for corrosion in general. In this case you need a new galvanic isloator, unless the stray current is over 1.5V in which case any isolator will be overpowered and something else is very wrong. If you have over 1.5V don't swim in that water or you could get paralyzed by it and drown, which is suspected to be the hidden and underlying cause of most marina drownings. This is why I won't dive on my boat in marinas anymore.

There is more, but this is the grand summary of what you need to do to check out your bonding and cathodic corrosion protection (zincs).

On my 20 year old boat I needed all new bonding wires, a new galvanic isloator, and in the slip I was in at the time I still had something going on. I was loosing zincs too fast. It wasn't until I got the corrosion reference electrode was I able to find the problem: my neighbor's shitbox sailboat. I decided to be bold and turned off his shore power breifly.... the current level on my boat changed dramatically (bingo). I moved to another slip and finally the problem went away.
Stephan
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Joined: Mar 30th, '11, 05:41
Location: Providence, RI

Post by Stephan »

Thanks for all the direction and encouragement.

Turns out the aft bilge pump’s float switch was off the reservation. When I put my multimeter between the battery + lead and the battery terminal it was 5+ volts with spikes to 12. OCD compelled me to keep checking after cutting the pump and float switch out of the circuit and found 0.7-0.9 volts with just the bare wire left after the auto/manual bilge pump switch. Checked again after disconnecting the wire from the switch and was ok. So all new wire/float switch and pump and hope to keep from frying any more paint on my rudders.

I replaced the pump without checking it. It was a Rule 1400 (how long since they made these???). When I cut the brown wire it looked like it was not tinned. The wire was stiff, brittle and the outer strands- the ones touching the insulation were black. The inner strands were copper colored. Did Rule produce pumps with un-tinned wire?

Thank you all again-
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Tony Meola
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Post by Tony Meola »

Stephan

I don't think Rule uses tinned wire in any of their pumps. I put in a new one two years ago and the wire was not tinned.
1975 FBC BERG1467-315
Peter
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Post by Peter »

Be sure when connecting bilge pumps (or any electrical device for that matter) that the positive wire is switched. If you switch the negative wire the device will turn on and off, but it remains "hot" and can contribute to issues just as you describe. Also the bonding system and the negative wire are held at the same potential by the common bonding point (usually on an engie block somewhere) If the switch is in the negative line this is no longer the case.
This is an easy mistake to make with float switches.

Peter
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