Marinetraders article is a good basic.*If a boat is older than 5 years the zinc/bonding loop should be checked to make sure the connections and wire are in good shape as the amount of current is measured in 1/10 of an volt/amp or smaller.* Therefore the connections/wire have to be in good condition to conduct.* So you zincs may look great but the metal on the boat is deteriorating.
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*Many zinc loops are daisy chain together in part or whole, so if one connection fails the remainder is un protected.* Many boats have a copper plate tube that runs along the bilge the length of the boat that the zinc/bonding green wire is connected which is better than the daisy chain loop. *If the PMM site come back up there is a recent discussion, Bond though hull or not that is more detailed.
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The best advice is to zinc up, and the easiest way is the fish looking zincs that you hang down into the water that you connect to the zinc loop and/or large metal things.* I added three to the Eagle over the winter months.* One connected to the bow thruster which are usually made of different metals be begin with, and the zincs are usually too small.* The second is attached mid way of the zinc/bonding loop.* The third attached to the main engine shaft, plus the external zincs are check every six months.* If you think your zincs are going to fast or you have stray electricity then call a MARINE electrician, not a dirt/domestic electrician.* Best to check, due and trace as much as you can, because they are expensive.**
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Oh, galvanic isolators are only good up to 1.2 volts AC anything higher pass though, and/or burn out the diodes so there is no protection.* I think galvanic give false security as many marines reading are higher than that. *Just so you are aware just becaseu your zincs look good and the boat has a galvonic isolator does not mean the boat is protected.* )-;* Arn't boats fun?* )-;
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