You are correct; the neutral and grounding wires should not be tied together onboard when power is supplied direct from the dock. However, they will be if power is supplied through an isolation transformer (at the secondary), the generator or inverter.
Well said but this is NEC talk and has been debated here to tears. The ABYC says one thing and depicts another. Many folk feel differently on these issues. TZ
I don't have an iso xfmr.
It is my understanding that all equipment should have an insulated return to a common grounding point. Also that all equipment in contact with the water should be bonded.
Agreed but this can become very confusing by not using the term "neutral" and "neutral buss." TZ
In the event of a fault, the grounding wire would become current carrying and have a direct path to the grounding bus. If no grounding wire is connected, only a connection from the heater case to the bonding system (my boat's original setup), all bonded metal becomes hot.
Well this trips breakers in allegedly all but the dock side power scenerio. Naturally one can see why it would be nice to wire grounds through to dockside in marine situations. It really boils down to whether our power pedestals in a marine world are really a sub panel. My contention, put a little differently is that the power pedestal source is our utility supply to the environment, our boats and should not be considered a sub panel. Then it becomes simple and safe. TZ
Even though a connection to the bonding ckt is 'electrically' the same as connecting a separate grounding (green) wire, on a boat this shouldn't be done. No equipment should be using the bonding system as a ground return as these connections could possibly be at different electrical potentials due to the physical connections varying resistances and could induce stray voltages in the bonding ckt. A separate grounding wire direct to the grounding bus avoids inducing any stray currents.
Of course. Again, "neutrals." TZ
Knowing all of this, it surprised me that there was no grounding wire provided for the water heater, only a bonding connection. Now that I'm thinking about it, there are no grounding wires to ANY elec outlet or the A/C system, I bet the fridge and stove are the same.
Maybe Hatt didn't know about stray currents back in '72.[/QUOTE
I don't know what Hatteras knew but it is a dynamic world and through mistakes and sometimes tragedies, standards get updated. TZ
Ted