Hydrozoan
Well-Known Member
Regarding the theory that a clean heat exchanger will make the anode work harder, it is likely that there is truth in this. Part of the protection in marine heat exchangers comes from a layer which is formed naturally on the surface of the copper-nickel tubes over about 8 to 12 weeks. If you are removing this layer every year through cleaning then it could mean that the anode is working harder during the re-layering period.
More information on the copper.org website here http://www.copper.org/applications/marine/cuni/txt_KME.html Hope this helps!
Depending on the strength of his brick acid (typically ca. 25-35% HCl, undiluted, IIRC!) and on how much (if any) calcium carbonate deposit was there to consume it first, the OP's cleaning regime could well remove the copper oxide layer completely, or substantially. I was unsure if that would work the anode noticeably harder, but if reforming the oxide layer takes 2-3 months I can well see why you think it could.