Obviously a toughie, Farley. While the evidence is apparent on the TM and the O/B and JP, it entirely possible the issue is elsewhere in the boat, and chances are is coincidental with the paint touchup you performed. Remember, everything on your boat shares a common ground, from the VHF to the NAV lights to the O/B to the TM...and thus there is always a path for ground back to the batt, from whatever appliance is the affected one. A "bad" ground from any appliance can sometimes take the positive side of the 12V circle to find it's way back to the batt. It's weird, but it happens. What I would start doing is checking continuity between all the 12V+ leads on your boat and the known good ground. Chances are you'll find continuity somewhere between hot and ground...which could be the path that electricity is flowing through that is attacking the more noble elements in the system, instead of the other way around.
Farley, remember, voltage is the measurement of potential energy. In other words, the presence of voltage, albeit small, means that you have basically and anode and a cathode set up where one wasn't intended to be. It would be my guess that the shaft and the housing either should be continuous, electrically, such that the potential is 0, or conversely, completely isolated such that there will never be continuity, thus again, the potential is 0.. I read a post where it said voltage in the 10s of millivolts wasn't a concern, however, in the hundreds of mV? Definitely a concern.
Farl, weird problem. I have to agree though, some type of partial short.I can relate however to the path of least resistance
Quote from: "seabob4"Obviously a toughie, Farley. While the evidence is apparent on the TM and the O/B and JP, it entirely possible the issue is elsewhere in the boat, and chances are is coincidental with the paint touchup you performed. Remember, everything on your boat shares a common ground, from the VHF to the NAV lights to the O/B to the TM...and thus there is always a path for ground back to the batt, from whatever appliance is the affected one. A "bad" ground from any appliance can sometimes take the positive side of the 12V circle to find it's way back to the batt. It's weird, but it happens. What I would start doing is checking continuity between all the 12V+ leads on your boat and the known good ground. Chances are you'll find continuity somewhere between hot and ground...which could be the path that electricity is flowing through that is attacking the more noble elements in the system, instead of the other way around.Thanks for the insight Bob, any relevance with me reading 300 millivolts between the TM case and shaft when it's on; but the shaft is not grounded that I can tell? Would this be considered enough stray current to cause this kind of accelerated electrolysis? Why aren't the zincs taking a pounding from this? All systems are working normally with one exception, my 757 Humminbird is having a hard time finding bottom while underway at idle or on plane. I cleaned the transducer face with alcohol and the transducer alignment is good, there are no visible breaks in the transducer cable but it is the third element that is underwater.