0 ratings0% found this document useful (0 votes) 116 views6 pagesElectrical Systems - Grounding - ON
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content,
claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PDF or read online on Scribd
Electrical’.
Systems
Problems on the ground = ea
Inthe marine environment, improperly
grounded AG circuits can-be-dangerous oe
by Nigel Calder
ecently, Wvidence has been
mounting that some deaths
‘around: marinas: that were
classified as drownings
‘were, in fact; electocutions. When
improper, OF ffulty, grounding of
either onboard or dodlside: wiring is
Conibined with AC leaks te ground,
enough current cin be fed:
neuital forming the return path tthe
power plant (without which nothing
‘would: Work)
‘At the power plant, the electric
company connedts:the neutral cable
toa buried metal plare. Among other
things, this has the effect of holding
the voltage onthe ‘neutral wire at
‘Wires—hot and neutrdl—are nin 10
all fixtures abd appliances, The in!
soming electhical box is considered
to be the generating source for the
house, and, as such, the cit
asta paleo a
butied pipe—a driven ground rod
at this point «
In the old days thtwas it
into the water (o paralyze the
macs of 4 switier, re
sulting in a drowning that
Teaves rio physical evidence
vo ‘
‘Thisteminids us once again,
if such 2 réfninder js needed
But in the event that 2 fault
‘developed such that a piece)
pf equipment developed ja
short ciréuit and became
shot,” anyone ‘coming. into.
contact with this eefipment.
= fiscompleted.the. circuit to
‘that the mariné environment
ground and received 4) se:
{s both unftiendly where elec-
‘icity is concemed and also,
specially in the €ase of AC
‘power, potentially lethal. To
Provide adequate protection
from shock hazards, rigorous
attention {0 correc installa-
tion practices is necessary,
‘Grounding wre
vere shock. What made the.
‘situation particularly dangers
ous Was that, in thany, ine
stances the fault current
could net run to grotinduntil<
buman or other comtactcom-
pleted the ‘circuit, 1A, sich
‘Circumstances, fuses and cir-
cuit breakers pravide no pro- |
tection; without @ path to
ground, the amount of cur:
rent necessary fo Blow the |
fuse’or tip the breaker sim
ply. does not flow. The fault.
with pariculat emptiasis 0” rye gdvantages of propery grounded AC circus are shown here.
‘proper Brounding sySteh. . Were» short to the eyelprent case fo develop inthe tp crc,
Tosee why the grounding the ease would become electrically “hot.” Should 2 crewmember
system is so import, We Wail Oe se te etm the sycem the rorecieal tote case
eed: to look at how AC 45 ha,'y more attractive path to ground and the crewmember is safe.
‘supplied. The electricity gen-
erated by power companies 1 pro
vided to.consumers via two wites,
‘Oné being 2 *hot' wire, and the other
a treutral” Or return wire: Both are
fall curentcarrying cables, the hot
‘Supplying current to appliances, the
Suvrvovst ives
“ground potential’—zero volts—al-
lowing ft 10 be used asa reference
‘point from which system voltage can
be measured (the neutral wire is
known ai the grounded wire).
When a house is wired, the two
Femainsundetected until the damage
is done. i
"To" improve system: safety, 6 third
{Green or untinsulated) grounding wire
hhas now been added to AC circuits
(note the term grounding is used 10ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
wool breakers
Dockside outlets wired to mi
p
Hee
Newtal
Shorepower cod, Grounding
‘and grounded on shore
| Shorepower cou
Two pole bakers
Pry?
eee ne
ieee
an
acon
aes
ean
Git
AC grounding
eu ted Bans
KH
a
distinguish this wire from the neutral
or grounded wire). The grounding
wire is connected to the external
cases of appliances and is in turn
connected at the power source (in-
coming panelboard) to the neutral
wire, and thus to the driven ground
rod." In normal circumstances, this
grounding wire carries no current,
but should some sort of a fault de-
velop that makes an appliance hot,
this wire will immediately conduct
the fault current safely to ground.
What's more, if the leak is a serious
fone, such as in a short circuit, as soon,
as it occurs the grounding wire will
allow high levels of current to flow
immediately blowing a fuse or trip-
ping a breaker.
This grounding circuit is thus a
redundant path to ground, parallel-
ing the neutral circuit. It provides an
essential degree of protection against
‘many common electrical faults. Rather
like a seat belt or an air bag in a car,
it doesn’t do any good until a prob-
lem develops, but then it might save
a life. Any break in the grounding
Circuit, such as cutting the ground pin
off an extension cord (2 common
The BOC Challenge 1994-95
CARR CAMPAIGN
4253 Dunning Road, Norfolk, Virginia 23618
phone and fax #: 804-480-0203
YOU CAN HELP AN AMERICAN WIN THE
1994-95 BOC SINGLEHANDED
AROUND THE WORLD RACE
‘The BOC singlehanded around the world race is
one of sailing’s most demanding mental, physical and
tactical tests.
‘YOUR contribution will support Michael Carr, an
experienced solo sailor, U.S. Coast Guard Officer, U.S.
Navy trained salvage diver and New England schooner,
ing a revolutionary 60-foot, Class 1 boat.
We need your support. For donations and/or
further information concerning personal and corporate
sponsorship contact CARR CAMPAIGN, 4253 Dunning
Ra., Norfolk, VA 23518, Please contact the Carr Campaign
for information on tax deductible contributions. a
Generous contributions have been made by ‘s
‘and the following supporters in the marine industry: Ocean
Navigator Magazine, Medical Sea Pak, Alden Electronics, Ses
Frost Refrigeration, Grest Bay Yacht Club, Celesticomp, Offshore
‘Survival Products, Sun Mar Corporation, Bass Harbor Marine,
Maine Compass Service.
‘This bresthrough, 60 loot. clase 1 bot by Kaufman Dasion
vl be constracted rom aluminum for tha BOC
jutyaucust 1993, aELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
sight around boat yards!), or a badly
corroded ground connection“on a
shorepower cord, potentially leaves
us with the old-style, two-wire circuit
that provides fault current with no
safe path to ground.
Shorepower grounding
For a boat connected to shoreside
power, the dockside receptacle is, in
ffect, the power source. The neutral
derwater fittings on the other boat
form the negative plate; and the water
in which the boats are floating is the
electrolyte. As soon as both: boats
plug into shorepower the AC ground-
ing wire completes the circuit be.
tween the two “battery terminals
Ge, underwater hardware on the
boats), causing galvanically-generated
DG current to flow along the AC
So long as a shorepower-based AC
system is properly grounded, in an
unmodified AC system, plugging in to
shorepower will always invite Corro-
sion. The problem is caused by pre-
cisely those steps deemed necessary
to safeguard people on board. We
end up with a clear conflict between
people safety and boat protection.
‘The challenge isto find an acceptable
and grounding cables will
be grounded to a driven
metal rod somewhere near
the main dockside panel
(the one that contains the
principal overcurrent pro:
tection device—icc., circuit
Grounng
Newval
Snovepower cord
Tworpole beak
LL
response t0 this situation
that accomplishes both ob-
jectives,
Breaking the circuit
From time t0 time a rec-
ommendation is still made
breaker). When the boat is
plugged in, the neutral cir-
cuit on the boat, and the
‘grounding circuit, are con-
nected to their respective
cables and consequently
both are grounded ashore
atthe point where the cables | »
1 = faster borween AC grounding and OC
Crests hol recommended
to cut the connection be-
tween the AC grounding
and DC negative circuits. In
theory, this isolates the AC
‘grounding circuit from un-
derwater hardware, break-
ing the path from shore to
water for DC galvanic cur
rents, while still maintain
ing the shoreside AC
Ineming AC sounding wre
connect to the driven rod. enc gouses
Just as ina house, fault
cament will be conducted |, Me
safely ashore via the | oti ao
grounding wire. Even in
the damp marine environ-
ment we still have excellent
protection against shock
Tsoation
sanstrmer
grounding connection for
people protection. On the
surface a simple, costef-
fective solution to the cor-
rosion problem that does
not compromise safety.
hazards. There is, however,
a snag: that same green, oF
uninsulated, grounding
wire that is providing such
essential people protection
may be contributing t0 gal-
vanic corrosion. This comro-
sion can take place even if
the AC circuits are perfectly
installed and functioning
faultlessly. Te has, in fac, AC gu
nothing t0 do with the AC mi
system itself, buts simply a
parasitic problem that
‘comes aboard with a proper
AC installation
Let's say two boats are appt
lying alongside one another.
Both are connected to
shorepower, and are prop-
erly wired with the AC grounding
Gircuit connected both ashore and
also to the onboard DC negative and
bonding system (more on this in a
moment). The underwater hardware
on one boat is protected by zincs but
the other boat doesn't have this pro.
tection. In effect, what we have is a
giant battery: the zincs on one boat
form the positive plate; bronze un-
The galvanic
42
Bonding
Lp ccrome
Zine
shows two locations for placing an iolator inthe
ani reat Locrion 3
pany stray AE to other parts OF
{ystem could Bypass the olator Placement 2 mates i easier to
sure tht no Current bypasses the slaor. The problem with his
{stat should the Bolator fal inthe open-ciruited mode, the boat
‘would lose AC grounding protection
{salvanie protection
DC
but
tive, seawater
circuits, , eliminated.
grounding wire. The least noble (gal-
vanically most active) metal will cor-
sode (in this case, the zincs). When
the zincs are depleted the next least
noble metal (some underwater fit-
ting) will start to go, (Even if both
boats are protected with zines, some
corrosion will still occur. Still, there
are boats that don't have zincs or
whose zines are close to depletion.)
irs)
fing protection as lane cee,
lost. The bottom diagram shows a superic
using an isolation transformer. This device magnetically
{transfers AC power to the boat, and severs the direct connection
between the boat’ grounding circuit and the shorepower ground.
This approach is frowned
con by most experts, how-
ever. There are at least four
1. In many instances the
shoreside grounding con-
nection is itself compro-
mised, either through faulty
wiring, or else because of
corrosion within one orboth,
of the shorepower cord re-
ceptacles, Should a fault cur-
rent develop, and the con-
nection to the DC negative
is stil intact, the current has
a relatively safe path to
ground through underwa-
ter hardware. (Of course,
this could endanger nearby
swimmers—but is. consid-
ered the lesser of the two
evils.) Without the DG negative con-
nection, any time the shoreside
grounding connection is defective
We are, in effect, back to the old,
unsafe two-wire AC system. Put an-
other way, the connection to the DC
negative provides one more line of
defense against defective AC circuits
or equipment.
2, Sometimes a serious leak can
(OCEAN NAVIGATOR NO. 55ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS.
‘occur between the AC circuits and the
DC negative cixcuit—the most likely
cause being a defective battery
charger, or a short between adjacent
AC and DC wiring. Without the AC
grounding to DC negative connec-
tion, this fault current has no safe path
back ashore.
3, Proper lightning protection de-
‘mands that the AC grounding circuit
and the DC negative circuit be held 10
the same voltage potential in order to
minimize the build-up of dangerous
voltages in either circuit. To do this
effectively the two must be electri-
cally interconnected.
4. Quite often, even if the AC
grounding to DC negative connec-
tion were to be cut, there would still
be some other, unforeseen, path (0
the DC negative. This might be through
a piece of AC equipment which is
itself in some way grounded to the
DC system (generators, air condition-
ers, non-marine battery chargers, some
water heaters) or through onboard
leaks between the two circuits. The
potential for corrosion would still
exist but without the boatowner be-
ing aware of it, with the resuit that
proper preventive measures would
not be taken.
Galvanic isolators
Rather than cut the AC grounding
to DC negative connection, the cor-
rect way to galvanicaly isolate the AC
circuit is with a galvanic isolator.
‘These devices consist of little more
than several special diodes wired in
parallel (0 conduct in opposite direc-
tions. It takes a certain voltage (typi-
cally around 1.5 volts) to make the
diodes conductive. If an isolator is
installed in the AC grounding wire,
unless there is a leakage current or a
stray DC current in excess of 1.5 volts
the diodes simply will not conduct. In
normal circumstances the isolator ef-
fectively breaks the grounding cir
uit, But in the event of a leakage
current greater than 15 volts, the
diodes become conductive, ensuring
the continuity of the grounding cir-
cuit
It would seem that the best place to
ut an isolator is between the AC
grounding and DC negative circuits
In this position an isolator failure
would not in any way compromise
the integrity of the ship to shore
grounding connection. However, as
noted above, in reality itis often next-
to-impossible to prevent some circuit
or other by-passing the isolator, ren-
dering it ineffective. The potential for
corrosion will once again exist while
the boatowner is under the illusion
that the problem has been solved.
‘Asa result, the American Boat and
Yacht Council (ABYC) and other au:
thorities recommend placing an iso
lator in the incoming AC grounding
wire immediately downstream of the
shorepower inlet. It is then a simple
matter to ensure that nothing by-
asses it
The obvious problem with the
ABYC's location is that should the
diodes fail in the open-circuited posi-
tion the grounding circuit will be
broken, voiding the protective func-
tion of the grounding wire. Alterna-
tively, should the diodes fail in the
conductive (shorted) position, there
will be no protection against galvanic
currents
Given that diode failure in most
a =
New MARYLAND NAUTICAL
SALES, INC.
2500 Series | rusts
. Borer, MO 21200
Marine Inverter 9-800-752-7245
+ 2500 Watts continuous Eo eal
+ 8000 Watts surge Worgwide Chart Coverage
+ 3-stage, 120 amp charger (over 10,000 chars in stock)
+ Certified to UL specs f syosaoun sty
+ Meets ABYC standards fo cemmrertseh mate
Enjoy he conveniences of home without having o put up with the noise and We Speco n National and
fumes of a generator. Trace 2500 series marine inverters quietly deliver 2500
watts of AC power from your batteries, automatically, on demand. Surge loads
‘upto 8000 watts are taken in stride. The 2512M marine inverteris ETL certified
t0 UL spocifcations and meets ABYC standards for marine use. A builtin 120,
‘amp, 3-stage battery charger and “smart” battery protection circuitry maximize
battery performance by tailoring charge-discharge oycles to your specific
battery type and bank size.
More power and features, but the same reasonable price and rugged perfor
‘mance that have made Trace the choice of people that know power inverter.
5916 — 195th NE Arlington, WA 98223
uaels2 (206) 435-8826 (Tel) « (206) 435-2229 (Fax)
For infomation wre No. 62 onthe reader service car.
Complete Line of Nautical Books |
‘ond Videos
USCG Exam Study Guides
*= Most, Mate ond Opercter
i
|
Uninspected Possenger Vessols
tAlOhes
‘WE SHIP WORLDWIDE DAILY
=o
Clocks « Barometers « snoculars
Sextants = Pog «|
te No, 6 onthe reader service card.
(OCEAN NAVIGATOR NO. 55ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS
To shorepower
Shorapower rd
cord and plug’ — =
in L
Ground Neutral Two-pole breakers —
6 Two-ple beat
f= :
Tar
ve
re)
To shorepower 2
‘round tug
Te shorano
ground os
Vescen
To perform these tests, the shorepower cord should have its shore-end unplugged while the boat
end should be plugged into the onboard receptacle. The tests shown above are detailed in the
sidebar on page 46 “Connective tests.” These tests wll indicate the effectiveness of the onboard
rounding circuit which essential fo protect crewmembers ram dangerous ground las. Other
tests can be performed on a “hot” shorepower cord, but should best be left to professionals since
the danger ofa lethal accident exists when testing lve AC lines.
the diodes. The capacitor will
allow alternating currents of
several amps and volts to be
shorted to ground without the
diodes conducting. In other
words, the capacitor will main-
tain galvanic isolation up to
higher leakage levels without
compromising grounding
safety. Once the carrying-ca-
pacity of the capacitor is ex-
ceeded, the diodes will be-
come conductive as with any
other isolator.
The alternative viewpoint is,
that the boatowner needs to be
aware of, and take steps to
cure, any leakage current, ei-
ther AC oF DG, in excess of 1.5
volts. According to this view,
the correct method of isolator
installation is not to include a
capacitor, but to combine the
isolator with a meter or warn-
ing device that will alert the
boatowner to any leakage volt-
age high enough to make the
instances is not externally visible, it
becomes essential to have a high-
quality isolator with both a continu-
‘ous current rating, and a short-circuit
rating, at least as high as that of the
main breaker on the circuit in which
it is installed (in practice this should
be higher, since breakers typically
trip at around 1.3 times their nominal
current rating). There are isolators
that do not have this current-carrying,
capability and as a result are poten-
tially lethal—a case of buyer beware!
JULYALGUST 1993
Beyond this, isolator design gets
controversial, The problem is that in
the damp marine environment, there
is often a low-level AC leakage into
the grounding circuit. This may be
high enough to make the diodes
conductive (above 1.5 volts) but low
‘enough to remain undetected. In such,
ceases, the isolator is doing nothing to
block galvanic currents
‘One school of thought holds that
capacitor—a device that conducts AC
but not DC—should be wired around.
diodes conductive. Such de-
vices are readily available, but rarely
used.
Whichever view is adopted, the
reality is thatthe majority of isolators
neither contain a capacitor, nor are
fitted with a warning device. There
are many which, because of improper
installation, or voltage leaks in excess
of 1.5 volts, are not providing gal-
vanic isolation.
Isolation transformers
Isolators are a low-cost, but only
partially effective, response to the
45ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS.
“otthis is importand
“or inverter tumed off and switched out ofthe AC cicult-
“and all AC breakers tured of, keep
een rete at a one nos te
~ oat has a oll © shoul be
regina one geaig e
people-versus-boat-protection conun-
drum. Ultimately the only way to
provide full people protection with-
‘out courting the risk of galvanic cor-
rosion is to install an isolation trans-
former on.the incoming shorepower
line.
‘The concept of an isolation trans-
former is straightforward, Shorepower
is fed into one winding (the primary)
and transferred magnetically to an-
other (the secondary). The primary
winding has a “shield” which is
grounded ashore, The secondary
‘winding may or may not be grounded
on board, Bither way, there is no
direct electrical connection herween
the shoreside supply and the onboard
‘AC circuit. This gives us two advan-
tages: 1) since the boat's power source
is now the secondary side of the
transformer, the only path for onboard
leakage current is back to the trans-
former, not the dockside supply—
leaks will not find a path to ground
through the water; and 2) since the
shoreside grounding wire is not con-
nected to the boat's grounding cir-
cuit, there is no ship-to-shore path for
galvanic currents.
‘Although the onboard circuit is
netimes ungrounded (in which case
its is said to be “floating’—unfortu-
nately we don't have space to delve
into the full implications of such a
system), the ABYC recommends that
‘one side of the secondary winding be
grounded on the secondary side of
46.
the transformer, with a grounding
circuit tied in at this point, and the
two then connected to the boat's DC
negative, This has the effect of pro-
ducing a “polarized” circuit on board
in which the grounded side of the
transformer is the neutral. In the event
of cither a short in a piece of AC
equipment, or a leak into the DC
Circuits, the fault current has a direct
path back to the transformer.
'At first sight, the connection to the
DC negative appears to bring Earth's
ground back into the picture, resur
recting the potential for shock haz-
ards 10 swimmers. But on closer in
spection, it can be seen that regard-
less of this connection, the only path
for fault current is back to its source,
which i the transformer, Earth ground
has no part to play in this circuit. The
fault current” circuit is completely
contained within the boat and its
‘wiring—swimmers will be safe.
It is important to distinguish an
isolation transformer from a polariza-
tion transformer. The primary and
secondary windings in the latter func-
tion as in an isolation transformer,
creating a floating AC circuit on board,
one side of which is once again made
neutral by tying ito the boat's ground-
ing circuit. What this does is provide
a constant polarity on board, regard-
less of the polarity at the shoreside
receptacle. But on the polarization
transformer, the shoreside grounding
connection is fastened to both sides
of the transformer, and ultimately to
the boat's DC negative: the trans-
former does nothing to provide gal-
vanic isolation, To get galvanic isola
tion. with such a transformer, it is
necessary t0 once again fit an isolator
in the grounding circuit. Its worth
repeating that so long as the ground
ing wire is carried on board and
connected 10 the boat's AC ground=
ing and DC negative circuits there
will be no galvanic isolation.
Safety without corrosi
Given the potentially devastating
consequences to both people and
boats of improperly wired AC circuits
‘we owe it t0 ourselves, our boats, and
others around us to ensure that our
installations are to the highest stan-
dards. The kind of jury-rigged circuits
that one so often sees around boat
yards and on board are simply not
acceptable in this day and age. As we
hhave seen, itis possible to have a high
level of shock protection, without
adding to corrosion problems, but
this is not something that happens
without close attention to details
Above all else, the grounding system
must be both electrically continuous,
yet galvanically isolated, m
Contributing editor Nigel Calder is
the autbor of The Boatowner's Me-
chanical and Electrical Manual pub-
Ushed by International Marine Pub-
lishing.
(OCEAN NAVIGATOR NO. 55,