Saran did not work for me.
Tom, I could not agree more with you. Unfounded statements, and arguments such as “there must be something wrong with that because some body must have tried it already” are not helpful. The only reason I posted my finding was to help my fellow sailors save time and frustration in a lingering problem. I don’t know why but I seem to have touched a raw nerve here. There is no way that wrapping aluminum foil over plastic hoses could affect any metals electrically insulated from the foil. This is the same as saying that the using of metal clamps on plastic tubes would cause Galvanic corrosion and make your rudder fall!!! For “Electrolysis” to occur, you need to have an electrolyte in contact with both metals. This is why the sacrificial anode in a boat is placed in contact with the salt water and not onboard. Thus, even if I had covered the through holes or the clamps, as long as no salt water comes in contact with both the aluminum foil and the through hole, there is no reason for Galvanic corrosion to occur. But, if it ever did, as pointed out by Tom, it would be the aluminum tape and not the through hole the one to suffer. I have to add that before I used the aluminum foil I used the Saran brand saran wrap, covered with duct tape, and my head was stinking in less than a month. Although the plastic cover may delay the stench, eventually, it too becomes impregnated and begins to smell. The real advantage of aluminum foil is that it not only poses a very high diffusion barrier to the stinking gases, but it is a substance with extremely low solubility for those gases. I don’t expect that the permeation will ever occur, and as long as salt water, and urine are kept were they belong, the foil should last for a long-long time. Yes, Peggie, you could say that stray urine could reach the foil and serve as electrolyte. However, in my introduction to your Flushing 101 course, I point out to our guests that my wife has forbidden peeing in the standing position on our head (and at home too!!). In any case, because of hygiene and the stench it causes, we make sure that no urine is ever left on any surface.I do promise to report any unusual Galvanic corrosion in my boat as soon as it happens, but I am so confident that the physics are in our side, that I will keep my foil around the tubes. I also promise to provide yearly reports on the state of smell of our head.Finally, based on known physics, I believe that there is no risks of wrapping the tubes with aluminum foil tape as long as care is taken to avoid electrical connections with bare cables. If you are worried about electrical connections, you could always cover the tube aluminum foil with a layer of electrical tape. My solution not only eliminates the need to replace your permeated plastic tubes for expensive specialty tubes, that will permeate in time any way, but it allows you to decrease the amount of water used per flush, increasing the time between pumpouts. Anyway, no matter how much water I flush with, in my 361 there are two tubes, the sea discharge and the pumpout tube, that are always full of water with feces and, as predicted, those tubes rapidly permeated until they were covered with a metal barrier.Actually, the aluminum covered tubes look kind of nice and add a space shuttle look to our headJose Venegas Ph.D. (Medical Engineering 83)