Question for the long-time boat owners and (if reading) the electrochemical engineers or scientifically inclined among the membership:
At a typical marina say that a zinc or Al alloy anode is suspended/immersed in saltwater by a synthetic piece of line. Therefore has no electromechanical connection to anything else metal. Six months later it is brought to the surface. The marine growth then is scraped away.
Other than surface tarnishing, will the anode look pretty much like when it was new? ... That is no deep pitting?
Asking the question to help me feel better given that my hanging over the side backup "fish" anode has depleted big time over the past eight months = evidence that hanging an anode will protect my bronze prop for a while even though the shaft anode fell off last week. My hanging anode is electrically bonded to the shaft inside the boat with a shaft brush. And for redundancy, also I have run a parallel pigtail from the anode direct to the engine block.
Picture of the removed anode attached. (I did replace with a new one.) The small shiny section in the anode is from a hack-saw cut I made after it's retrieval from the water to see how much good metal might still remain below the surface pitting. Looks the same to me as the surface of new anode I hung in its place. The anode is a military spec Al alloy type. I put the anode pictured in my bench vice and bent it almost 90 degrees. Then straightened it out again. The Al alloy remained pliable. To me an indication that inside, the anode still hadn't sacrificed all its electrons.
Impressions and experiences please!
At a typical marina say that a zinc or Al alloy anode is suspended/immersed in saltwater by a synthetic piece of line. Therefore has no electromechanical connection to anything else metal. Six months later it is brought to the surface. The marine growth then is scraped away.
Other than surface tarnishing, will the anode look pretty much like when it was new? ... That is no deep pitting?
Asking the question to help me feel better given that my hanging over the side backup "fish" anode has depleted big time over the past eight months = evidence that hanging an anode will protect my bronze prop for a while even though the shaft anode fell off last week. My hanging anode is electrically bonded to the shaft inside the boat with a shaft brush. And for redundancy, also I have run a parallel pigtail from the anode direct to the engine block.
Picture of the removed anode attached. (I did replace with a new one.) The small shiny section in the anode is from a hack-saw cut I made after it's retrieval from the water to see how much good metal might still remain below the surface pitting. Looks the same to me as the surface of new anode I hung in its place. The anode is a military spec Al alloy type. I put the anode pictured in my bench vice and bent it almost 90 degrees. Then straightened it out again. The Al alloy remained pliable. To me an indication that inside, the anode still hadn't sacrificed all its electrons.
Impressions and experiences please!
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