1985 Newport 30 Propeller Shaft Spar

Mar 1, 2022
5
Newport Mark iii Bellingham
Hi all, first time poster. Bought a Newport 30 Mark iii a couple of years ago. Just pulled it out for the first time yesterday and saw some pitting etc on the propeller shaft spar. Any resources for spar replacements?
 

jviss

.
Feb 5, 2004
7,089
Tartan 3800 20 Westport, MA
Hi all, first time poster. Bought a Newport 30 Mark iii a couple of years ago. Just pulled it out for the first time yesterday and saw some pitting etc on the propeller shaft spar. Any resources for spar replacements?
Congrats and welcome.

I think you mean strut, not spar, correct?

Pics would help.
 

jviss

.
Feb 5, 2004
7,089
Tartan 3800 20 Westport, MA
I will defer to others with more expertise, but I personally wouldn't worry about that. I'd clean it up and give it a couple of coats of bottom paint and call it a day.
 
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Likes: Tally Ho
Jun 11, 2004
1,775
Oday 31 Redondo Beach
I might not be worried about the pitting but would be worried about what looks like pink areas. Hard to tell from the pictures but if it is really pink that might indicate the loss of some integrity.

Look up pink bronze shaft strut.

Can you wire wheel or grind off some of the surface and see what the metal really looks like.

Is there a professional in the yard you could ask for an opinion?
 
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Likes: kloudie1
May 17, 2004
5,704
Beneteau Oceanis 37 Havre de Grace
I don’t know the acceptable level of corrosion on the strut, so I can’t comment on that part. I will say that’s a healthy looking shaft zinc considering the pitting on the strut. Is the shaft under the zinc clean enough for a good connection between the two? Are the prop shaft and strut both electrically connected to the engine?
 
Mar 1, 2022
5
Newport Mark iii Bellingham
Our boat yards locally don't let us work on our boats when on the hard. They have of course offered to quote on replacing it. We have asked them to clean it up and coat it. We try to get three years between bottom paint so are thinking we put a zinc on it, and plan for it three years from now. Having a hard time looking up a strut online or finding other wrecking yards in the US (we have one here locally, Lynden WA) but they dont have a Mark iii currently.
 
Jan 11, 2014
13,009
Sabre 362 113 Fair Haven, NY
Pinking is a sign of the zinc in the bronze leaching out, this significantly weakens the zinc. It probably won't fall off but it is more likely to develop cracks. It needs to be replaced. A prop shop should be able to help you. Or have a foundry cast a new one. Casting a new on won't be cheap. You have a good foundry near by, talk to them.

 
Jan 11, 2014
13,009
Sabre 362 113 Fair Haven, NY
Our boat yards locally don't let us work on our boats when on the hard. They have of course offered to quote on replacing it. We have asked them to clean it up and coat it. We try to get three years between bottom paint so are thinking we put a zinc on it, and plan for it three years from now. Having a hard time looking up a strut online or finding other wrecking yards in the US (we have one here locally, Lynden WA) but they dont have a Mark iii currently.
Unless you find the reason for the zinc leaching out and correcting the problem, in three years it will be worse. You probably won't find a direct replacement. A prop shop can probably build one or a foundry cast a new one.
 
Feb 26, 2004
23,054
Catalina 34 224 Maple Bay, BC, Canada
but I personally wouldn't worry about that. I'd clean it up and give it a couple of coats of bottom paint and call it a day.
I would. I think this is incorrect advice. See Richard's post.
I will say that’s a healthy looking shaft zinc considering the pitting on the strut. Is the shaft under the zinc clean enough for a good connection between the two? Are the prop shaft and strut both electrically connected to the engine?
While the shaft zinc might look intact, in that construction, the cutlass bearing inside the strut isolates the shaft and the strut. That's why "rudder" zincs or strut zincs are used on these two close but isolated pieces.
We try to get three years between bottom paint so are thinking we put a zinc on it, and plan for it three years from now.
You might check into your neighbor's experiences with zincs in your marina. Three years is a looong time for zincs to last. In California, before I moved here in 2016, I'd get three to six months before my diver, who came monthly, had to replace one or both (shaft and strut). My experience here now has been more, but not much more than a year.
And, for sure, have someone knowledgeable help you check the condition. Even if they don't let you "work" on your boat in the yard, who is actually going to stop you bringing a portable dremel with a wheel or even some sandpaper to slough off a bit of the strut surface?
Good luck.
 
Mar 1, 2022
5
Newport Mark iii Bellingham
Sorry, wont be three years between zinc, we check them monthly with our gopro (dive in the summer) and replace seasonally in water. We are on a three year pull out schedule for bottom paint etc. The yard where the work is being done has inspected and believes that it is structurally sound, they will clean it up and have photo's for the next time we pull out for comparison. Thanks for all the input. Really appreciate it
 
May 17, 2004
5,704
Beneteau Oceanis 37 Havre de Grace
While the shaft zinc might look intact, in that construction, the cutlass bearing inside the strut isolates the shaft and the strut. That's why "rudder" zincs or strut zincs are used on these two close but isolated pieces.

Good luck.
I agree. I was assuming the strut was (designed to be) bonded, in which case it would be protected by the zinc.
 
Apr 22, 2011
944
Hunter 27 Pecan Grove, Oriental, NC
I put small mushroom zinc on my prop strut. Easy to do and cheap insurance against further dezincification.
 
Jun 11, 2004
1,775
Oday 31 Redondo Beach
FYI, bronze is copper and tin, not zinc.
True, pure bronze is copper and tin but I think if you look you will see that many shaft struts are made of manganese bronze. Manganese bronze can have a significant zinc content.

look up "manganese bronze shaft strut".

I think that is why many "bronze" struts have their own dedicated zinc anode protection.

For example, this is from the Catalina direct parts site:

Prop Strut Zinc Anode
Part #: Z5074
$13.13
Zinc anode sized specifically for struts used on Catalinas. Although the struts are made from military grade 70 manganese bronze they contain about 25% zinc and should be protected by a zinc anode if in salt or brackish water or if in a marina that is "hot" with stray electrical current.

A proper zinc anode
The alloy used by the manufacturer is military grade 70 manganese bronze. Selected for its corrosion resistance and strength, it is still as much as 25% zinc. With age, a process called “bleeding” can occur when the iron and zinc, elements in the alloy, come to the surface significantly reducing the strength of the bronze. This can make a strut's normally bronze color appear pink.
 
Last edited:

jviss

.
Feb 5, 2004
7,089
Tartan 3800 20 Westport, MA
True, pure bronze is copper and tin but I think if you look you will see that many shaft struts are made of manganese bronze. Manganese bronze can have a significant zinc content.

look up "manganese bronze shaft strut".

I think that is why many "bronze" struts have their own dedicated zinc anode protection.

For example, this is from the Catalina direct parts site:

Prop Strut Zinc Anode
Part #: Z5074
$13.13
Zinc anode sized specifically for struts used on Catalinas. Although the struts are made from military grade 70 manganese bronze they contain about 25% zinc and should be protected by a zinc anode if in salt or brackish water or if in a marina that is "hot" with stray electrical current.

A proper zinc anode
The alloy used by the manufacturer is military grade 70 manganese bronze. Selected for its corrosion resistance and strength, it is still as much as 25% zinc. With age, a process called “bleeding” can occur when the iron and zinc, elements in the alloy, come to the surface significantly reducing the strength of the bronze. This can make a strut's normally bronze color appear pink.
Yes, a zinc anode to protect bronze makes sense.