Ross, Thanks for the link, I hoped someone would look it up
When I designed marine products for Merriman we had our own Bronze Foundry. We made Lubrite bearings for Bridges, Sintered metal products (like Textile Rings, Gears and the like) and Marine Hardware. Before that I had been a QC Engineer at General Dynamics Electric Boat, in the Foundry/machine shop areas. I'm a little rusty now but haven't fotgotten everything.Rich, you're right about the name of red brass, but I used the name Red Bronze deliberately. If you access Ross's link, you will see that Leaded Red Brass has a minimum of 84% copper and a maximum of 6% zinc and it is used for marine fittings. It has a good resistance to salt water corrosion so I called it bronze. High strength Manganise Bronze on the other hand which you might find in propellers, has only 60% copper and 22% zinc, and is not so good, as are many other of the yellow bronzes. So I'm sorry to say, your statement, though well intended, is incorrect, and the point I was trying to make, is that through hulls may properly be red. I hope you don't take offense.Joe S