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#3
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"Gogarty" wrote in message
Put a donut zinc between the strut and the prop. Uhhh, We HAVE had a zinc on the shaft and the MaxProp's hub as well. Both get half eaten each year. Before the MaxProp & its zinc, we lost the same half of the shaft zinc. In article , "Boots" wrote: why don't you treat the problem and not the cause??? We have no AC connection to dock power. There is no electrical connection to the shaft or strut; the shaft is isolated by a plastic drive-saver; electrical resistance between boat ground and shaft is essentially infinite, so it's not from the battery. It happened while we were in the mooring field. Thus, I believe we solved what you believe is the problem already. The *only* thing it can be is the difference in potential between bronze and stainless steel. OR... the potential difference between both steel & bronze and zinc, and that's what I've been thinking for the past few years. Truth be told, I *have* thought about switching out the shaft for bronze. If the zinc still disappears, it's the zinc's problem as there's nothing left. My only problem with this solution is that bronze bends quite a bit easier than SS, and I'm more concerned about proper shaft straightness and alignment than the loss of relatively cheap zincs. -- Jere Lull Xan-a-Deux ('73 Tanzer 28 #4 out of Tolchester, MD) Xan's Pages: http://members.dca.net/jerelull/X-Main.html Our BVI FAQs (290+ pics) http://homepage.mac.com/jerelull/BVI/ |
#4
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Jere Lull wrote:
"Gogarty" wrote in message Put a donut zinc between the strut and the prop. Uhhh, We HAVE had a zinc on the shaft and the MaxProp's hub as well. Both get half eaten each year. Before the MaxProp & its zinc, we lost the same half of the shaft zinc. In article , "Boots" wrote: why don't you treat the problem and not the cause??? We have no AC connection to dock power. There is no electrical connection to the shaft or strut; the shaft is isolated by a plastic drive-saver; electrical resistance between boat ground and shaft is essentially infinite, so it's not from the battery. It happened while we were in the mooring field. Thus, I believe we solved what you believe is the problem already. The *only* thing it can be is the difference in potential between bronze and stainless steel. OR... the potential difference between both steel & bronze and zinc, and that's what I've been thinking for the past few years. Truth be told, I *have* thought about switching out the shaft for bronze. If the zinc still disappears, it's the zinc's problem as there's nothing left. My only problem with this solution is that bronze bends quite a bit easier than SS, and I'm more concerned about proper shaft straightness and alignment than the loss of relatively cheap zincs. Then you are left shopping for a stainless prop. Zincs may be cheaper. Go without and watch the prop melt until thr money saved on zinc offsets the cost of a prop. Or not. A thin insulating bushing and washer between the shaft, prop and nut may serve you well. |
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