I disagree with that a wee bit.
First of all are you wanting to run a negative polarity wire from your battery to the hull so you can simply connect the positive wire to appliances and accessories and use the hull as the negative return path for the current of the appliance/accessory??
If so then you'll end up with more strife then Speed Gordon could handle.
Simply put....DON'T.
Now if you run a positive and a negative wire to all appliances/accessories and a decent sized wire from your outboard (which is directly connected to the negative terminal of the battery) to the hull and every metal (or alloy) surface in the hull then that may reduce the amount of corrosion occurring.
The key point on that idea is the equipotential bonding of
all metal (or alloy) in the boat.
That is that
all metal (or alloy) surfaces in the boat will be at the same potential (or voltage).
The reason corrosion occurs in hulls is that some surfaces are not at the same potential (ie potential difference). This is more apparent in older hulls which have the seats etc riveted into place.
A slight potential difference will exist between these riveted surfaces and this is where the corrosion will start because where there's surfaces of potential difference there's a resistance between the surfaces and where there's potential difference (voltage) and resistance there's a current flowing and this current is the corrosion maker.
This is why you rarely see corrosion where welds are but every where where there's two bits of metal (or alloy) bolted, screwed or riveted together).
As a side note this is also why you sometimes get tingles in the shower in older homes (especially if you have cuts on your hands and it's dry dirt around the house).
The waste water (where your feet are normally) via the old sewer pipes are at a different potential to the water pipes of the house and when you turn the taps on (with your hands with the cut) your the equipotential bonding conductor between the old sewer pipes to the water pipes ie you get a tingle in your cut.
I have measured some of these tingles to be well over 100V in some homes.
Outboard manufacturers use this equipotential bonding on their outboard to reduce corrosion. They're the little bits of wire everywhere that look like little traces connecting different parts of the outboard together.
Clear as mud???Sorry
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