Eric---
I was told not to skimp on the wire so I used a length of automotive battery cable. The boat end is fed down through a covered deck hawse into the lazarette and clamped to the port bronze rudder post, which is also tied into the boat's bonding system. The other end is "connected" to a used transom zinc with a stainless eye bolt, three nuts and two fender washers. The strands of the stripped battery cable are splayed out, and fork around the bolt and are mashed onto the zinc's center plate by one of the fender washers.
I tied a line to the eye of the bolt and let the zinc down to the depth I want. A loop in the boat end of the line goes around one of the aft cleats. So the weight hangs on the line, not the cable. Rather than take all this apart every time we take the boat out, I just pull up the line, wire, and zinc and set it in a bucket on the aft deck. Changing the zinc is just a matter of removing the two "end" nuts and fender washer, putting the bolt though the slot on a replacement zinc, and putting the nuts and fender washer back on to clamp the wire to the zinc again.
My wife made a big fabric "Stop-Zinc" sign that we hang on the shifters whenever we deploy the zinc, which is only in our home slip. This will (hopefully) prevent me or someone servicing the boat from starting the engines and putting the transmission in gear. Turning the port prop under power could conceivably pull the zinc or the line or cable into it.
An advantage of this arrangement is you now have a zinc in the bonding system that you can pull up and take a look at.* If the zinc goes away at its normal rate for your harbor, everything is working fine.* But if the zinc stops going away, or its rate of deterioration suddenly increases, you have a warning to check things out.
-- Edited by Marin on Sunday 20th of December 2009 05:25:14 PM