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This article
was originally published in the October 15, 1996 issue of Practical
Sailor. The author, Stan Honey, is a renowned sailor,
navigator and electrical engineer.
Marine
Grounding Systems
ground n. 12. Electricity A. A large conducting body, such as the earth or an electric circuit
connected to the earth, used as an arbitrary zero of potential.
In a normal
house on land, the problem of grounding is simple. It consists
of the green grounding wire in the AC wiring system and serves the
purpose of preventing shocks or electrocution. The ground
connection is usually made by clamping to a metal water pipe or by
driving a long copper stake into the ground.
On a boat,
things are considerably more complicated. In addition to the AC
ground, we need a DC ground or return line, a lightning ground, and
a RF ground plane for the radio systems. Our first thought
might be to simply make the ground connection to a metal thru-hull,
propeller shaft or other underwater metal. This underwater
metal will be grounded by connection to the seawater will serve as
our “water pipe”. Unfortunately, a connection between any of
these systems and underwater metal can, and probably will, give rise
to serious electrolytic corrosion problems. This article will
discuss the particular requirements of each system, resolve the
contradictions between the systems and present a consistent and
correct solution for a complete, integrated, marine grounding
system.
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Figure
1. The boats electrical system should be connected to seawater
at one point only, via the engine negative terminal or its
bus.
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DC Ground
Every light
or appliance should be wired with its own DC return wire.
Never use the mast, engine, or other metal object as part of the
return circuit. The DC load returns of all branch circuits
should be tied to the negative bus of the DC distribution panel.
In turn, the negative bus of the DC distribution panel should be
connected to the engine negative terminal or its bus. The
battery negative is also connected to the engine negative terminal
or its bus. The key factor here is that the yacht's electrical
system is connected to seawater ground at one point only, via the
engine negative terminal or its bus. See figure one.
AC Ground
See
Practical Sailor August 15, 1995 for a detailed treatment of the
green wire. The best solution is a heavy and expensive
isolation transformer. The acceptable solution (for the rest
of us) is to install a light and inexpensive Galvanic
Isolator in the green wire, between the shorepower cord socket
on your boat, and the connection to the boat's AC panel. Then,
connect the grounding conductor (green) of the AC panel directly to
the engine negative terminal or its bus. Note that this meets
ABYC's recommendations. In choosing Galvanic Isolators, make
sure that you select one that has a continuous current rating that
is at least 135% the current rating on the circuit breaker on your
dock box. Certain Galvanic Isolators (e.g. Quicksilver)
include large capacitors in parallel with the isolation diodes,
which in certain situations theoretically provide better galvanic
protection. Unfortunately, these units cost substantially more
than conventional Galvanic Isolators. If you feel like
spending real money on galvanic isolation, you might as well do it
right and buy an isolation transformer.
It is also a
good idea to use a Ground Fault Interrupter (GFI) in your AC wiring.
GFI's will occasionally "nuisance trip" due to the
humidity surrounding the wiring on boats, but the additional safety
that they offer (particularly to nearby swimmers) in disconnecting
power in the presence of ground currents is worth the nuisance.
If your GFI starts to nuisance trip, it is probably a very good idea
to track down and clean up your damp wiring in any event.
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Figure
2. Ground fault circuit interrupters (GFCI) should be
installed in each AC circuit. A GFCI will disconnect power
in the presence of ground currents, helping prevent an
electrocution.
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Lightning
Grounds
Connect
a 4
AWG battery cable from the base of your aluminum mast to the
nearest keel bolt from external ballast. If you have internal
ballast, you should install a lightning ground plate. One
square foot is recommended for use in salt water; fresh water
requires much more. Do not rely on a thru-hull or a sintered
bronze radio ground (e.g. Dynaplate) for use as a lightning ground.
For additional
comfort, also run a 6 AWG wire from your keel bolt or ground plate
to the upper shroud chainplates, and to your headstay chainplate.
Don't bother with the backstay if it is interrupted with antenna
insulators. Have each of the cables that are used for
lightning ground wires lead as directly as possible to the same keel
bolt, with any necessary bends being smooth and gradual.
Given that you
have grounded your mast solidly to the ocean, your mast will be at
exactly the same electric potential as the ocean. There is no
chance that you can dissipate the charge between the ocean and the
atmosphere, so don't bother with a static dissipater at the
masthead. Wire "bottle
brush" static dissipaters may be useful to dissipate
seagulls, however, but that is beyond the scope of this article.
RF Ground
Your VHF
doesn't need to use the ocean as a counterpoise, so here we are
dealing only with the ground needed for your HF/SSB radio.
Mount your automatic
tuner as close to the backstay as possible, preferably just
under the after deck. Run copper ground tape from the tuner to
the stern pulpit/lifelines, to the engine, and to a keel bolt.
It is good practice to include the HF/SSB radio itself in this
network of ground tapes. If the builder of your yacht had the
foresight to bond into the hull a length of copper tape or an area
of copper mesh, be sure to run a copper ground tape to this as well,
and say a blessing for builders such as these. Sintered bronze
ground plates (e.g. Dynaplates)
can be used as radio grounds in situations where the ballast or
engine is unavailable or awkward to connect. If the ballast,
engine, and lifelines are available, however, they generally make a
high performance ground.
Bonding and
Electrolytic Corrosion Due to Hot Marinas
Do not bond
any thru-hulls or other immersed metal that can be electrically
isolated. Specifically, keep your metal keel/ballast, your
metal rudder shaft, your engine/prop, and all thru-hulls
electrically isolated, from each other, and from the engine.
It's worth
understanding the reason. In an increasing number of marinas,
there are substantial DC electric currents running through the
water. If your bits of immersed metal are bonded, the electric
current will take the lower resistance path offered by your boat in
preference to the water near your boat, and the current will flow
into one of your bits of metal, through your bonding wires, and then
out another bit of metal. The anodic bit of metal or thru-hull
that has the misfortune to be on the "out current" side of
the current running through your bonding system will also become
"out metal" and will disappear, sometimes rapidly.
Your zinc is
only intended to protect against the modest galvanic potentials and
therefore currents that are caused by the dissimilar metals that are
immersed and electrically connected together on your own boat.
Your zinc is incapable of supplying enough galvanic potential to
protect against substantial DC currents that may be flowing in the
water. These DC currents in the water will cause electrolytic
corrosion to your bonded thru-hulls or metal parts.
Zincs and
Protection from Galvanic Corrosion
Use
zincs to protect against the galvanic currents that are set up by
dissimilar metals on your boat that are immersed and that are in
electric contact with one another. The best example is your
bronze propeller on a stainless shaft. The best protection is
to put a zinc
right on the shaft next to the propeller, or a zinc
on the propeller nut. An isolated bronze thru-hull doesn't
need protection because it is not in electrical contact with another
immersed dissimilar metal. If electrically isolated, high
quality marine bronze, is electrochemically stable in seawater;
nothing good can come from connecting wires to it.
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Figure
1. Conductors running from the external keel or ground plate
to the mast, stays and to the metal fuel tank will protect
against a lighting strike, and there will be no DC connections
to the engine or to the electrical system.
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Stainless steel
is a special case. Generally, it is a bad idea to use
stainless steel underwater, because it can pit. When it pits
the "nobility" of the metal changes locally, and you end
up with tiny galvanic couples that are made up of different parts of
the same piece of metal and the pits grow deeper. One school
of thought suggests that if you must use stainless steel underwater
(e.g. you need its strength), then you should connect a nearby,
immersed zinc to it; this protects the stainless steel from itself,
reducing the rate of pitting. The electrochemistry of this
assertion is compelling enough to recommend that you protect a
stainless steel rudder shaft with a zinc. This may be done by
mounting a zinc on the hull near the rudder shaft, and electrically
connect it (inside the hull) to the stainless rudder shaft.
For the reasons described above, ensure that your metal rudder shaft
is not electrically connected to anything else. Your stainless
steel propeller shaft will be protected from itself, by the same
shaft zinc that protects the propeller from the stainless steel
shaft. In both cases the pits, if they appear, will appear
where the stainless steel is not exposed to the water. Trouble
areas are in the cutlass bearing, inside the rudder bearing, and
just inside the top of the rudder.
Keep your metal
keel/ballast electrically isolated from all other bits of metal.
If you have the misfortune to have an external iron or steel keel,
however, mount a zinc directly on it to reduce the rate of
corrosion. Leave lead keels/ballast isolated.
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Figure
1. To avoid making another DC ground to the engine via the HF/SSB
radio copper ground strip, fasten the copper tape securely to
an insulating piece of phenolic or to a terminal strip, cut a
1/10" gap across the tape, and solder several 0.15 uF
ceramic capacitors across the gap.
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Inconsistencies
in the Ground Rules
So now, you
are annoyed with the inconsistencies. We said to leave all
bits of immersed metal electrically isolated when we described
electrolytic corrosion and hot marinas, but then we said to connect
wires and copper tape to your keel and engine for lightning and RF
grounds. So what to do?
RF ground.
The RF ground needs to be a ground for RF signals only. It
does not need to conduct DC, and as described in "Bonding and
Electrolytic Corrosion..." above, you do not want to connect
another DC ground to your engine and to your keel etc.
The solution is
to find a dry secure place along each of the copper RF ground tapes
that are running to your engine and keel. Fasten the tape
securely to an insulating piece of phenolic or to a terminal strip,
cut a 1/10-inch gap across the tape, and solder several 0.15uF
ceramic capacitors across the gap. These capacitors will be
transparent to the RF, which will be happily grounded by the ground
tape system, but they will block any DC currents from running
through the RF ground system, and will avoid any resulting
susceptibility to hot marina electrolytic corrosion. It is
worth selecting the capacitors carefully, because they may carry a
significant amount of RF current. An acceptable choice of
capacitors and vendor are listed at the end of this article.
Lightning
Ground. The lightning ground needs to be a direct DC
connection to the keel or to a ground plate to handle currents due
to lightning strikes. So how do we keep the keel or ground
plate electrically isolated as required in "Bonding and
Electrolytic Corrosion..." above?
The solution is
to connect the keel or ground plate directly to the mast, but make
sure the mast is not electrically connected to the boats DC ground
system. If your steaming light, masthead light, tricolor,
Windex light etc. are wired carefully and correctly, they each will
have their own DC return wire; there should be no ground connection
between their wiring and the mast itself. Make sure that this
is the case. This should also be true of your masthead
instruments. The unintended DC connection between mast and DC
ground is typically made by the masthead VHF whip, which connects
the shield of the coax to the bracket connected to the mast.
That shield also connects to the VHF radio which is DC grounded by
its power connection. The easiest solution is to insert what
is called a "inner-outer DC block" into the coax.
This RF device puts a capacitor in series with the center conductor,
and another capacitor in series with the shield. This device
is transparent to the VHF RF signals in the center conductor and
shield, but blocks any DC current in either the center conductor or
shield. This device can be made by a good radio technician, or
purchased from radio supply houses, pre-fitted with any kind of coax
connection on both ends. The commercial units look like a coax
"barrel" connector. A vendor is listed at the end of
the article.
Once the DC
connection from the mast to the VHF is broken, check for any other
connections with an ohmmeter, and straighten out any other wiring
errors or unintended connections. If your metal fuel tank is
also bonded to the lightning ground system (per ABYC) then make sure
that it does not have DC connections either to the engine via the
fuel line or to the electrical system via the fuel level sensor.
A piece of approved rubber fuel hose in the fuel lines to the
engine solves that connection, and a well designed fuel level sensor
will not make electrical contact with the tank.
When you're
done, there will be heavy conductors running from the external keel
or lightning ground plate to the mast, stays, and to the metal fuel
tank, but there will be no DC connections to the engine or to the
yacht's electrical system. See figure 3.
Summary
By using
capacitors to block DC connections in a few key areas, it is
possible to have perfect ground systems for AC, DC, RF, lightning,
and corrosion, and have a boat that is immune to stray DC currents
that are traveling through the water in "hot marinas."
In the old days,
the technique of bonding everything together worked okay. In
its defense, the "bond everything together" approach makes
your boat less sensitive to electrolytic corrosion that can result
from faulty wiring on your own boat. The problem is, the
"bond everything" approach leaves your boat totally
defenseless to wiring errors in nearby boats and nearby industry,
that cause stray DC currents to run through the water.
Today the
technique of bonding everything together would still work fine if
your boat spent all of its time on the high seas, in remote
anchorages, or in marinas that were wired perfectly and in which all
of the nearby yachts were wired perfectly. Having underwater
metal bonded together in crowded marina's today, however, is asking
for expensive trouble. As outlined above, it is avoidable
trouble. It is possible, with careful wiring and a few
capacitors, to have the best of all worlds, good RF and lightning
grounds, ABYC approved DC and AC grounds, and security against
electrolytic corrosion caused by hot marinas.
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Sources:
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Inner-Outer
DC Blocks:
PolyPhaser, Model IS-IE50LN-C1, This Inner-Outer
DC block also contains a lightning arrestor. It costs
about $120 from www.aesham.com
800 558 0411 It uses type N connectors.
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Capacitors
for use to block DC in SSB grounding tape: Digi-Key, (800) 344 4539. Type X7R Monolithic Ceramic
capacitor, 0.15uF, $0.91 each, Digi-Key part number P4911-ND.
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