That's all the manual says. No drawing, nothing. So according to the manual, the lightning ground system on the CD22 must just be for the standing rigging, since my CD22 has no engine, no fuel tank, and no fuel fill cap.3.18 LIGHTNING GROUND SYSTEM
Your Cape Dory is equipped with a lightning ground system installed in accordance with the American Boating and Yacht Council (A.B.Y.C.) specifications. Every shroud and stay is connected to an external ground plate by a #8 A.W.G. stranded copper wire. Other equipment requiring bonding include the engine, fuel tank, mast step and fuel fill cap. Within practical working restraints, the wires are lead directly to the ground plate. (Note - Typhoon and CD-22 have optional lightning ground systems.)
While no one can predict how lightning will react when it hits a spar, we know from actual experience that this system offers added protection.
During a lightning storm refrain from touching any metal objects such as shrouds, mast, stanchions, pulpit, etc., as these may attract lightning.
Do not paint the external ground plate with bottom paint as this prevents the plate from grounding out with the seawater.
Periodically inspect the connections in the bilge to see that they are tight and clean and free from corrosion.
I'm wondering why this wire is run to the battery area. Every drawing I've found of lightning protection systems omits a wire to the negative post of the battery. If I'm not mistaken, the area under the battery is where an optional diesel engine could be installed in the CD22. Maybe they ran this wire for the engine block connection in the lightning grounding system for the extremely unlikely eventuality that an engine was installed? I don't think many CD22s had diesels, so to fit all CD22s with this wire doesn't seem to make sense to me.
Could it be that there were at one time two more wires split off from this one that were connected to the bronze cockpit drain seacocks that are not too far away, and that the other seacock under the sink was also once connected but no longer is? But it doesn't make sense to me that a lightning system and a bonding system would have been connected together, and there is no evidence that such wires ever existed.
I welcome your speculation on the purpose of the wire and what, if anything I should do with it. It seems like a bad idea to connect it to the battery negative terminal, which is the only thing in that area, as that would just feed any lightning strike right into the whole DC system.
Thanks!
Jim
The extra wire in question. I know what all the other wires here do. The DynaPlate attachment in the bilge that the wire runs to. Looks like I need to do some cleaning!