Main Sail, I wanted to ask your opinion on my Zinc Anode protection plan for a Catalina 22 swing keel (cast iron). The boat will be sailed exclusively in salt water and although I would prefer to sail it dry (for cost reasons), lets assume I will be in a slip or on a mooring ball.
Myself and a few other C-22 owners have recently completed or are in process of swing keel overhauls. I sand blasted, repaired, and completely epoxy encapsulated mine. So the idea of drilling and tapping the cast iron for mounting a zinc anode would compromise my water tight integrity and I just think that's nuts.
This suggestion came from Stingy Sailor and I plan on using it; I will drill a hole in the hull and epoxy in a stainless blind threaded bung ( I have several of these in 304 stainless 1/4"/20 and 5/16 that I use in custom chopper builds). I will weld a stainless tab to the back and drilled for a small screw. The bung will be glassed into the hull near the keel cable winch. The zinc will be bolted to hull bottom and the tab inside will have a wire that connects to the winch body (winch body is not painted, galvanized). The stainless keel cable goes down to the end of the keel and attached to the stainless eye bolt that threads about an inch into the cast iron. One poster pointed out that Blue Loctite or similar thread sealer will not inhibit conductivity enough to make all this useless.
When doing my research on galvanic corrosion I find most information is related to power boats or sailboats with inboards and little about smaller fiberglass sailboats with outboards. The few comments I have noted say if your keel is lead you don't have an issue anyway, and if your cast iron keel is completely epoxy encapsulated you are fine as well. But besides the keel (cast iron encapsulated or not), I have bronze keel hangers, bronze keel pin, stainless hanger bolts, stainless eyebolt and keel cable all below the water (as well as a bronze thru hull that is new, and the original 'volcano' tube that shows signs of galv corrosion).... Ergo, I think this is all worth protecting.
Does all this make sense or I am over-engineering it?
Myself and a few other C-22 owners have recently completed or are in process of swing keel overhauls. I sand blasted, repaired, and completely epoxy encapsulated mine. So the idea of drilling and tapping the cast iron for mounting a zinc anode would compromise my water tight integrity and I just think that's nuts.
This suggestion came from Stingy Sailor and I plan on using it; I will drill a hole in the hull and epoxy in a stainless blind threaded bung ( I have several of these in 304 stainless 1/4"/20 and 5/16 that I use in custom chopper builds). I will weld a stainless tab to the back and drilled for a small screw. The bung will be glassed into the hull near the keel cable winch. The zinc will be bolted to hull bottom and the tab inside will have a wire that connects to the winch body (winch body is not painted, galvanized). The stainless keel cable goes down to the end of the keel and attached to the stainless eye bolt that threads about an inch into the cast iron. One poster pointed out that Blue Loctite or similar thread sealer will not inhibit conductivity enough to make all this useless.
When doing my research on galvanic corrosion I find most information is related to power boats or sailboats with inboards and little about smaller fiberglass sailboats with outboards. The few comments I have noted say if your keel is lead you don't have an issue anyway, and if your cast iron keel is completely epoxy encapsulated you are fine as well. But besides the keel (cast iron encapsulated or not), I have bronze keel hangers, bronze keel pin, stainless hanger bolts, stainless eyebolt and keel cable all below the water (as well as a bronze thru hull that is new, and the original 'volcano' tube that shows signs of galv corrosion).... Ergo, I think this is all worth protecting.
Does all this make sense or I am over-engineering it?