POWERBOTERS GUIDE TO ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS MAINTENANACE TROUBLESHOOTING & IMPROVEMENTS MANUAL

Page 180

POWERBOATER’S GUIDE TO ELECTRICAL SYSTEMS

Ground-Fault Circuit Interrupters Ground-fault circuit interrupters (GFCIs) are a specialized type of circuit breaker designed to trip open whenever resistance between ground and the ungrounded conductor drops below 25,000 ohms. Any time current is diverted from the white wire, such as through your body when you grab a hot AC wire, the GFCI senses the absence of grounding current and opens the circuit, hopefully in time to prevent all your friends and relatives from having to make premature calls to the florist. Just as with home installations, boats are required to have ground-fault circuit interrupter outlets on certain branch circuits of the AC service. This type of outlet is easily identified by the test and reset buttons located on the face plate. Many novice electricians assume that the purpose of GFCIs is to protect the circuit or device a circuit is feeding. Not so! GFCIs are intended to protect people from shock, not equipment. GFCI protection is required in areas of the boat where excess moisture or a particular shock hazard may exist. Specifically, the ABYC recommends GFCIs in heads, galleys, engine rooms, and on deck. For all practical purposes, this means you may want a GFCI on every AC circuit on your boat. In some cases, protection for all of these areas can be provided by just one GFCI outlet, with conventional outlets installed “downstream” from the GFCI. To protect the other outlets downstream, the GFCI must be the first outlet in the circuit. On larger boats, this protection may be broken up into more than one circuit, necessitating the use of several GFCI outlets.

outlet mounted in a safe area, such as in the galley. Figure 11-8 illustrates how this arrangement should be wired.

Testing GFCI Outlets All GFCI outlets used on boats must be tested monthly. The delicate internal mechanism of a GFCI outlet used in the harsh marine environment can corrode and cause the unit to not trip when you need it most. The simple test procedure is often overlooked, and not testing each outlet every month can cause obvious problems (it won’t work when it’s really needed).

TEST

Green White

Black

RESET GFCI OUTLET

Ignition Protection with GFCIs All of this is of particular significance to boats that use gasoline as fuel and must meet ignition-protection requirements as discussed in chapter 4. Most GFCI outlets are not rated for ignition protection and therefore should never be used in engine rooms. Marine-grade GFCIs are available, but at considerable cost. This is really no problem for either the boatbuilder or you if you intend to add an outlet in your boat’s engine room. Simply use a conventional outlet in the space requiring ignition protection, and tie it into a GFCI 166

STANDARD OUTLET

Fig. 11-8. A GFCI outlet with a non-GFCI outlet wired in to share protection.


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Resources

1min
page 214

Index

18min
pages 215-223

Installing Your Own Radar

5min
pages 205-206

Glossary

14min
pages 207-213

Galvanic Isolators

6min
pages 191-193

Power Supply

3min
page 196

Installing a GPS Receiver

2min
page 204

AC Generators

5min
pages 189-190

Selecting a DC-to-AC Inverter

17min
pages 184-188

Checking Voltage, Continuity, and Polarity on AC Circuits

7min
pages 181-183

AC Overcurrent Protection

4min
pages 176-177

Ground-Fault Circuit Interrupters

2min
page 180

Color Coding for AC Wiring

3min
page 172

Comparisons between AC and DC Circuits

6min
pages 173-175

The Future

1min
page 169

General Instrument Troubleshooting

16min
pages 163-168

Adding a New Compact-Disc Player

7min
pages 158-160

Abnormal Instrument Readings

3min
page 162

Installing a New Cabin Light

3min
page 153

Engine Ignition Switch

4min
pages 147-148

Installing a New Bilge Pump

10min
pages 154-157

Other Outboard-Engine Starter-Motor Problems

1min
page 149

Testing the Neutral-Safety Switch

3min
page 146

Outboard-Engine Starter Circuits

10min
pages 142-145

Beyond the Basics: Outboard and PWC Ignition Systems

6min
pages 124-125

Testing Your Stop Switch

3min
page 133

Starter-Motor Problems and Solutions

2min
page 138

Final Checks and Ignition Timing

8min
pages 134-136

Troubleshooting Starter-Motor Circuits

6min
pages 139-141

MerCruiser Thunderbolt IV and Thunderbolt V Systems

7min
pages 121-123

Outboard and PWC Ignition Tests

19min
pages 126-132

Solar Cells

2min
page 113

Battery Installations

15min
pages 90-95

Outboard-Engine Charging Systems

5min
pages 108-109

Testing Your Batteries

10min
pages 96-99

Shore-Power Battery Charging Systems and Installations

9min
pages 110-112

Battery Maintenance and Testing

4min
pages 88-89

Battery Safety

5min
pages 86-87

Which Battery Is Right for You?

9min
pages 83-85

Types of Lead-Acid Batteries

9min
pages 80-82

Connecting the Dots: Making Wiring and Connection Repairs

8min
pages 73-78

Wire Routing and Support

4min
pages 71-72

Acceptable Locations for Fuses and Circuit Breakers

4min
pages 69-70

Ignition Protection

1min
page 66

Levels of Circuit Protection

1min
page 68

Fuses and Circuit Breakers

14min
pages 60-65

Testing Fuses and Circuit Breakers

2min
page 67

Wire Insulation

2min
pages 57-59

Wire Size

2min
page 56

Basic Wiring

3min
page 55

Using Your Multimeter

10min
pages 44-47

Expanding the Basic Circuit

3min
page 33

Wire Identification and the ABYC Color Code

8min
pages 29-32

Measuring Amperage

4min
pages 48-50

Tools

2min
pages 24-25

Drawing Your Own Wiring Diagram

9min
pages 36-38

Ohm’s Law and What It Can Tell Us

8min
pages 19-21

Voltage Drop

2min
page 22
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