I've been following this thread with curious interest, but had nothing to add until now.
My dinghy motor, a Honda 2HP, has a rather large zinc on it. It's the same one specified in the owners manual so I know it wasn't done randomly by the original owner. I've noticed that it builds up what looks like a calcium crust over it when I've left the engine in the water for a day or two. I scrape it off a couple times a year when it starts to cover a significant portion of the zinc, but otherwise haven't worried about it. My auxiliary engine is a Tohatsu 8HP 2 stroke. I finally this year went and bought the OEM anode, instead of using an oversized pancake zinc that more or less fit, when I was doing work on it, and the OEM anode is far far too light feeling to be zinc. It looks and feels like it's an AL alloy of some sort.
Does this mean that on the dinghy motor it should be a smaller anode, and given that it's an aluminum engine, should have one of the AL alloy anodes on it instead of a zinc one?
This is a picture of the OEM anode from Tohatsu.
