John,John Danicic wrote:Philip and Sharon:
We keep Mariah at a dock with the AC cord plugged in and a True Charge 20, 3 stage charger on float when we are not around. Being in the fresh waters of Lake Superior, I don't believe (and please, someone correct me if I am wrong) that galvanic corrosion is as big a problem as our sea water brethren experience. We
John Danicic
CD 36 - Mariah - #124
Lake Superior
It is my belief that you are correct in your thoughts in regard to galvanic corrosion and electrolysis in fresh and salt water.
Years ago, many years ago, I used an experiment to illustrate the current carrying ability of water. I mentioned this previously and it's in the archives somewhere.
I would screw a light bulb into a common pigtail type socket. The socket's white ground would be attached to a male plug. From the plug's hot side, I would attach another wire whose other end would be skinned bare of insulation and immersed in a glass of tap water. A third wire would be skinned and also immersed in the same glass of water. The third wire's other end would be attached to the hot side of the lamp socket.
When the plug was put into a 110V wall outlet, nothing would happen. The electrolyte (water) had too much resistance to conduct enough amperage to light the lamp. As regular salt found in a salt shaker was sprinkled into the water, the conductivity would increase and the lamp would begin to glow. The more salt that was added, the brighter the lamp would become. When enough salt was added and the water agitated, the lamp would attain full brightness.
Pure, clean water has high electrical resistance which relates to little conductivity. As the water becomes more contaminated, the resistance decreases. You don't hear much about it, but for this very reason it is recommended that only distilled water be used in your batteries to prevent internal electrical leakage and premature failure. Before anyone gets defensive, I would guess that maybe 1% of us use distilled water and 99% of us use tap water to top off our cells and we still get long life for our batteries.
Mecca for most electricity is earth ground. It will seek out the path of least resistance to get there. This also applies to lightning. It will find ground easier in salt water than in sweet water.
As far as galvanic corrosion goes, I feel that salt water provides a better electrolyte than sweet between dissimilar metals and therefore enhances the corrosive effect.
O J