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This article is an excerpt from NauticEd’s online Skipper Large Powerboat Course, a comprehensive online powerboating course for beginner to intermediate boaters to learn how to operate large powerboats 26 ft (8m) and above. You can learn and improve your powerboating with NauticEd, the international leader in boating education.

Diagram showcasing electromagnetic induction with rotational motion and current amplitude graph over time.

Alternating Current and Direct Current

In your house, your wall outlets deliver alternating current (AC) electricity. The electricity provided to your house and your marina from the national electric grid is AC. Most of the devices in your house consume AC power.

In contrast, on a boat (and in your car), most of the electricity consumed by the devices on board is direct current (DC) and comes from the onboard battery.

There is a distinct difference between AC and DC electricity, and there is a very good reason why your house and your boat differ in this respect.

DC

While anchored up at night in a gorgeous cove, your only source of electricity (without the noise of an engine-powered generator) is from the batteries on board. Thus, batteries are an essential element of a modern-day yacht. Batteries power essentials such as lights, GPS devices, alarms, bilge pumps, and creature comforts like refrigerators, fans, and electric toilets. Some might also argue that the frozen concoction blender is also essential.

Batteries only store electric energy in the form of differently charged plates, one positively charged and the other negatively charged. When these plates are connected via a circuit (through a light bulb for example), electrons flow consistently in one direction from the negative plates out around the circuit and back to the positive plates. This unidirectional flow of electricity out from a battery is called direct current (DC). Thus, almost all of the devices needing electricity on a boat are designed to consume DC electricity because DC is readily available from the batteries. To charge a battery, which means to place positive and negative charges on opposing plates inside a battery, you must push DC current back into the battery.

AC

Some boats are fitted with AC air conditioning units and microwaves. By their own nature, they require AC electricity and a lot of it.

There are two sources of AC on a boat:

  1. While you are docked at the marina you can pull AC electricity from the marina via your shore power cord—the “yellow dock line.” This is called shore power because it comes from the shore. In the USA and Canada, the AC voltage is a potentially lethal 110 v AC. In most of the rest of the world, the AC voltage is an even more lethal 240 v AC.
     
  2. Your boat might have an onboard marine generator. These are large fuel-driven engines specifically designed to create enough electricity to power an air conditioning unit, microwave, and hair dryer, for example, while you are away from the marina. They weigh in the range of 500 pounds (230 kilograms) and are typically only on larger yachts greater than 40 feet (12 meters). Generators will typically also power the onboard AC outlets.

Creating Electricity

Creating electricity is fairly simple: You spin a shaft carrying copper wires between two magnets. As the wires cut through the magnetic field lines, electrical current is created in a direction through the wire. When the shaft rotates 180 degrees and cuts the magnetic field in the other direction, the current is reversed. This is the same process used in hydroelectric power stations, where the mechanical energy of the spinning shaft in a turbine is converted to electrical energy and distributed to the electric grid in AC form. 

Even though the current alternates, the power transmitted (which is the product of voltage and current) is always positive during each half-cycle of the waveform. This is because power is calculated as the product of voltage and current at any given moment. Even when the current reverses direction, the power remains positive during each half of the AC cycle, allowing energy to be delivered continuously to the load (like a motor or appliance).

creating electricity

The graph above shows the alternating profile of current. it is constantly alternating from current flowing in one direction and then the other.  AC, by its own nature, is dynamic, and thus, it is not possible to store electrical energy in AC form in a static battery. To do so would mean the chemical reaction inside the battery would need to alternate. So, you will never see a thing called an AC battery. To store electrical energy, you must convert AC to DC and then pump it into a battery where the energy is stored in an electrochemical form. 

You can learn more in the Skipper Powerboat Course....

Knowledge and theory to operate powerboats 26ft and greater. The Skipper Large Powerboat Course is a comprehensive online powerboating course for beginner to intermediate powerboaters wanting to learn how to operate larger powerboats greater than 26ft. Or upgrade to the Bareboat Charter Master for Powerboats Bundle of online courses to also master multiday and near-coastal powerboating as well as charter powerboats on vacations.

Author

  • Grant Headifen

    My vision for NauticEd is to provide the highest quality sailing and boating education available - and deliver competence wherever sailors live and go.

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Last updated on December 28th, 2024