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Thread: Zinc me before they sink me.

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  1. #1
    Join Date
    Sep 2001
    Location
    Santa Cruz, California
    Posts
    461
    John,

    So since conventional wisdom says to bond all metals except my thru-hulls, and since the only metal in my OB equipped (no inboard) Ariel is the rudder, and I have added zincs to the rudder shoe to protect the shoe and lower shaft and another zinc connected by a copper strip to the upper shaft, so that's it I suppose for bonding. I am stuill perplexed, however by Grocco's seacock installation instructions that say, "connect the sea cock to the vessel bonding system with 14 guage wire and a ring connector. A bonding screw bolt is provided on the sea cock flange for this purpose. Connection to the vessel bonding system must be in accordance with ABYC projects E-1, E-2, and E-9."

    Although I do have some wires that must have led to what once was a linghtning grounding system, the wires now lead nowhere, unless of course somewhere there is a connection to my Loran RF ground (The rusted steel eye bolt in the bilge that is screwed into the lead ballast, which is encapsulated in glass, unless somehow the lead ballast is connected to the rudder shoe.

    None of my former thru-hulls cockpit or head thru-hulls had attachment points. I have no other thru-hulls, so I better chase down those stray wires.

    Can I rule out a connection betweeen by lead ballast and the rudder shoe, at least as built by Pearson?
    Last edited by Scott Galloway; 09-02-2004 at 10:41 AM.
    Scott

  2. #2
    Join Date
    Jan 2003
    Posts
    15
    I bought a used sail from someone in Minneapolis whose Commander was totaled after a lightning strike. His report is instructive...

    As for lightning (the class of the first sailboat I owned), It was frightening to see pockmarks all about the hull at every place there was a wave peak when the bolt hit, while the boat was moored in 25' of water on the St. Croix. The areas with the chain plates were especially hard hit as the charge jumped from the plates, thru the glass at the waterline...I could put a key 3" into the delamination at the bow; amidships the scoop out of the hull was the size of a golf ball. The lateral damage from the travel of the bolt from amidship plates to the hull pass throughs and on to the motor mounts was frightening. It is a tribute to the old fashioned construction techniques of Pearson's glass lay-up that she didn't sink. I saw a cored Hunter in a yard hit by the same storm that received $15,000 worth of damage. There they were removing 1'x 2' pieces of glass - with that same golf ball sized scorch mark - that looked like the black aftermath of a grass fire on the resin impregnated interior layer.

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