Marine electronics

Ancor Marine Wire

Ancor makes the tinned copper wire that holds up to salt, vibration, and years in a bilge. Pick the right gauge and jacket for your run, your amperage, and your distance. Ancor builds marine-grade wire to ABYC standards Ancor builds marine-grade wire to ABYC standards and the tinned copper is what sets it apart from the cheap stuff at the hardware store. Every strand is coated in tin so it shrugs off the corrosion that turns bare copper green in a salt environment. We stock the full range from light primary wire to heavy battery cable in the gauges and jacket styles a real install calls for. Tinned copper and why it matters On a boat untinned wire wicks moisture...

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Ancor makes the tinned copper wire that holds up to salt, vibration, and years in a bilge. Pick the right gauge and jacket for your run, your amperage, and your distance.

Ancor builds marine-grade wire to ABYC standards

Ancor builds marine-grade wire to ABYC standards and the tinned copper is what sets it apart from the cheap stuff at the hardware store. Every strand is coated in tin so it shrugs off the corrosion that turns bare copper green in a salt environment. We stock the full range from light primary wire to heavy battery cable in the gauges and jacket styles a real install calls for.

Tinned copper and why it matters

On a boat untinned wire wicks moisture and corrodes from the cut end inward until the connection fails usually somewhere you cannot reach. Ancor tins every strand so the wire stays conductive and flexible for the life of the boat. It is the difference between rewiring once and chasing electrical gremlins every single season you own the boat.

Pick the right gauge

Wire gauge comes down to two things. How much current the circuit draws and how long the run is. Higher amperage and longer distance both call for thicker wire a lower AWG number to keep voltage drop under the three percent ABYC target for critical circuits. As a rough field rule a long run to a bow thruster or windlass almost always needs a heavier gauge than the appliance label suggests. Undersize the wire and you get dim lights slow pumps and heat. When in doubt size up.

Primary duplex triplex or battery cable

Single conductor primary wire is right for simple positive runs. Duplex two conductor and triplex three bundle the runs in one jacket for pumps lights and bilge circuits where you want the ground riding along. Heavy battery cable handles the big draws to your starter windlass and inverter. Match the jacket and conductor count to the job.

Buy by the foot or by the spool

For a one off repair by the foot lengths keep it simple. If you are rewiring a console or running new circuits a full spool costs less per foot and leaves you stock for the next project.

Installation tips for long service life

Support wire runs every eighteen inches with marine grade clamps to limit vibration damage. Leave a little slack at each end so movement from the boat does not pull on terminals. Use adhesive lined heat shrink connectors and seal every joint against moisture. Route wire away from heat sources and sharp edges. Label both ends of every run so future work stays simple. These steps turn good wire into a reliable system that passes survey year after year.

Common mistakes to avoid

Many owners reuse old untinned wire during a quick fix only to face the same corrosion problem months later. Others pick the smallest gauge that fits the terminal and ignore voltage drop on longer runs. Both choices lead to heat weak performance and early failure. Always start with tinned wire sized for the full load and distance.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why use tinned marine wire instead of regular copper wire?

Tinned copper resists the corrosion that destroys bare copper in a salt environment. Untinned wire wicks moisture and corrodes from the cut end until the connection fails. Tinned wire stays conductive and flexible for the life of the boat.

How do I choose the right wire gauge?

Size by current draw and run length. Higher amperage and longer runs need thicker wire lower AWG to keep voltage drop under the three percent ABYC target for critical circuits. When in doubt size up.

What is the difference between primary duplex and triplex wire?

Primary is a single conductor for simple runs. Duplex bundles two conductors and triplex three in one jacket which is handy for pumps lights and bilge circuits where you want the ground running alongside.

Is Ancor wire ABYC compliant?

Ancor marine wire is built to ABYC standards with tinned fine stranded copper rated for the marine environment. That is why it is the standard choice for boat wiring that has to pass survey and last.

Should I buy wire by the foot or by the spool?

By the foot is simplest for a small repair. For rewiring a console or running several new circuits a full spool costs less per foot and leaves you stock on hand for the next job.

How should I support and protect marine wire runs?

Support every run every eighteen inches with marine clamps. Add slack at ends and use adhesive lined heat shrink connectors. Keep wire away from heat and sharp edges to prevent early failure.

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