White Ground wire

Joined
Sep 7, 2015
Messages
27
I’m rewiring and installing new lights on my boat trailer and i keep reading about adding a dedicated ground wire for all the lights to prevent grounding problems . can i splice in a new ground wire from my trailer plug ground and then run it to each light splicing them in then loop the long ground wire back to the plugs ground . I’m trying to stop using the trailer frame or hitch coupler for the grounds
 

brodmann

Chief Petty Officer
Joined
Jun 17, 2008
Messages
426
It doesn't have to be a loop. Just add to the existing white wire and run it to all of the lights. The white wire gets it's ground from the tow vehicle. No need to connect back to the white wire.
 
Joined
Sep 7, 2015
Messages
27
It doesn't have to be a loop. Just add to the existing white wire and run it to all of the lights. The white wire gets it's ground from the tow vehicle. No need to connect back to the white wire.
It doesn't have to be a loop. Just add to the existing white wire and run it to all of the lights. The white wire gets it's ground from the tow vehicle. No need to connect back to the white wire.



Ok thanks a million that’s the kind of info i was looking for . i really want to get away with using the trailer frame or hitch as a ground . Tired of fighting light problems
 

04fxdwgi25

Chief Petty Officer
Joined
Mar 25, 2022
Messages
537
Don't know many pro guys that use the boat trailer chassis as a common ground point. Too many corrosion / connection related problems. On a camping trailer, ok, but not a boat trailer.

They do bond the ground to the trailer frame, but for the most reliable system, all the lights (and electric brakes) get their own harness ground connection.
 

dingbat

Supreme Mariner
Joined
Nov 20, 2001
Messages
16,066
They do bond the ground to the trailer frame, but for the most reliable system, all the lights (and electric brakes) get their own harness ground connection.
Doubling up the number of wires and connections increases liability?
MTBF studies say otherwise

Sticking the light's ground tab under the head of a mounting screw in a thru hole installation is not a proper ground connection.

The first thing I do on any new trailer is to drill, tap and install proper ground connections at each lighting fixture.
 
Last edited:

Grub54891

Admiral
Joined
Jun 17, 2012
Messages
6,071
I always run the white to each light. On my new caravan they already did that for me. Most reliable way to do it!
 

04fxdwgi25

Chief Petty Officer
Joined
Mar 25, 2022
Messages
537
Doubling up the number of wires and connections increases liability?
MTBF studies say otherwise

Sticking the light's ground tab under the head of a mounting screw in a thru hole installation is not a proper ground connection.

The first thing I do on any new trailer is to drill, tap and install proper ground connections at each lighting fixture.
To each his own. Can you cite the MTBF study(s) you refer too?

Solder and sealing shrink work wonders.
 

Grub54891

Admiral
Joined
Jun 17, 2012
Messages
6,071
I only use crimp style connectors that after they are crimped with the proper tool you shrink the plastic that they come with. West marine has them. Sealed well.
those ones that you just stick the wire in and hit with a heat gun are not a proper connection.
 

bruceb58

Supreme Mariner
Joined
Mar 5, 2006
Messages
30,537
I do a ground to the frame at every light fixture. I then paint over it to basically seal it.
 
Joined
Sep 7, 2015
Messages
27
Update for everyone i bought a 20 ft roll of 16 gauge wire first extending the white ground wire on the harness then i ran the extension wire to the two markers and tail/signal lights starting with the left side then looped it to the right side ending at the side marker light on the right . Everything works like it should and now that i didn’t use the trailer frame or hitch at all for grounding purposes but only the truck’s ground when the trailer’s plugged in to the truck hopefully i never have light problems again . I also used butt connectors that shrink when heated, heat shrink over the butt connectors then wrapped that with electrical tape
 

mike_i

Ensign
Joined
Jun 28, 2017
Messages
942
Good job, that's what I did, other than the electrical tape. Tape won't do much good other than trap water inside. I use liquid tape over the heat shrink.
 
Top