Tranona
Well-Known Member
My last boat was moored on a remote mooring & the keel bolt I drew out went from over an inch diameter down to nothing in less than ten years.I don't know if that was electrolytic action but it sure as hell was alarming.(I had had the keel off 7/8 years previously so was able to check the condition.When I went to nip up the keel bolts last year as a matter of routine.The spanner just revolved at the slightest pressure & I drew out the stub about 4" long)![]()
The problem with your iron bolt was probably not galvanic - just straightforward rust iron/steel in damp conditions. Particularly bad where a bolt passes through a wooden keel.
The anodes on your new boat are probably a complete waste of time. If they ar iron keels they will corrode, either because the surface treatment fails and/or impurities in the casting cause pockets of rust to form. There is no chance of galvanic corrosion as there are no dissimilar metals together.
Crevice corrosion in stainless steel is an entirely different phenomenom and is caused by oxygen exclusion. Most common in threads of bolts or where a bolt passes through damp wood. An anode will do nothing to stop this. Stainless is widely used for keel bolts in GRP boats because if the sealant used in the hull/keel interface is good, they never get wet. The have the advantage of not corroding on the surface in wet bilges unlike mild steel keel bots or nuts.