I've been mostly off grid recently and am just catching up on the Forum. This thread was a great read! (I popped onto the Forum only briefly earlier when I saw an engine specific thread title pop up).
Tangential question: Is it uncommon for a boat with 30A/120V service to have overcurrent protection on neutral at the on-boat 120V main breaker/disconnect?
Does the answer change if the boat has dual 30A/120V service? (In which case, there would be two breaker/disconnects)?
On the boat the main disconnect breakers should have over-current protection on both hot and neutral, but if you know breakers, a 30 amp load wont trip it off, It takes 37 amps to instantaneously trip, I tested mine once. It takes a long time to trip a little above 30 amps. And those shore plug connections are not that great, they get corroded or loose, and they can barely carry 25 amps safely due to high resistance.
So each shore cable has its own double pole breaker, on the pole on the dock, and should be one also in the boat. Lots of redundancy there.
When I rewired, I used 8 gauge wire not 10 gauge for the main wiring runs to the panel. This added a 10 amp safety factor. I thought why not, I am the one doing the work, I am not paying someone, so the extra cost was acceptable to me. I still used 30 amp double pole breakers. I also changed all onboard wiring to 20 gauge and moved the oven to 10 gauge, which probably was not worth it. But I was thinking what if all the burners and the 2 oven broilers are on at the same time, I did not want a voltage drop. So its funny that I have twin 30 amp shore power and then one of my distribution panel breakers is also 30 amps.
I also setup a double pole 30 amp switch that I can join the shore only twin 30's into one 30 on the boat, that way all circuits can be powered off one 30 amp shore cord, which is very convenient. I never run all that much AC stuff on the boat at the dock. On the water, I turn my gen on, and we might conceivably be running AC, MW, fridge and the oven all together. Interesting I just thought I could have done that with another 30 amp double pole breaker, but the switch is less space used up.
At the dock, just the AC and the fridge is running. And occasionally the MW, all 3 of those adds up to a little under 30 amps.
And the one shore cord is breaker protected to 30 amps.