Re: Extreme Corrosion Problem - see attached pics
Welcome to the board. I wish you could have joined under more positive circumstances.<br /><br />Thanks for posting pics with your query. Its helpful, worth 1000 words. Unfortunately, Im guessing you are going to have to eat the cost of this. I am making presumptions based on the pic of the battery. Im thinking there is something more going on with your boat that you havent told us.<br /><br />I am looking at three identical crimped connectors. One goes to the green wire the marina accidentally installed. Did the marina also accidentally install two red wires? Whoever did the electrical work on your boat didnt get it quite right. And I dont like the color of yellow that I see. Yellow is ok for AWG 12, the min size the green wire has be, but those look like common automotive ring connectors, not marine grade. It looks like corrosion is already starting on the end of the green wire so I am presuming it is not tinned, and in the dimple on the ring terminal of the red wire on the right. I could be wrong, maybe just pixel aberration characteristics of your camera.<br /><br />I also question a marinas involvement in hooking up anything electrical on a boat, especial anything to do with shore power that does not go thru appropriate shore power connectors.<br /><br />Depending on whats going on with your boats electrical, that green wire could very well provide a path for 12vdc from your bats positive post, thru your lower unit, and into the water. If that is the case, your boat was likely a source for other boats galvanic corrosion issues in that marina. Where does the other end of that green wire go? What is it connected to?<br /><br />Fwiw, the ac ground (green wire) is supposed to be a direct path to ground, not a source of ac current. If you have an inverter onboard, it is possible the green wire is tied to a common ground (ac and dc) and you would have a direct short between battery posts, tho I would have expected more fireworks unless you have (or used to have due to corrosion) a common connection at a ground plate below the waterline. So I presume separate ac and dc grounds.<br /><br />As shown in your pic, IF the marinas shore power continuity is correct, the result would be a dead battery every time you hooked up to shore power.<br /><br />You have two problems, (1) a dead lower unit, and (2) mucked up electrical onboard. If the marina actually connected that green wire, I suggest you hire a certified marine electrician to document everything about that. Youll need it to pursue compensation from the marina.<br /><br />As far as fixing the electrical, there are several people on this board that can help you correct that if you are marginally handy and want to go down that road. Just dont inquire about crimping vs soldering too early on.