VicS
Well-Known Member
Thank you.
I think you have now answered my original question:
Anodes are no longer "a black art".
Thank you all.
Good. I was thinking of mixing a potion for you
...................
Thank you.
I think you have now answered my original question:
Anodes are no longer "a black art".
Thank you all.
Yes, so to clarify myself - they are not advised for sailboats. We built many steel boats here, having several zinc anodes on hull and Baltic is not so salty. Aluminium might be even better, but here a danger is they may be spent before next haul-out, without noticing. Can happen in 'electrified marina' for instance, this was known to happen.Aluminium is far more widely used than zinc for steel structures in seawater. For example, see http://www.bacbera.dk/index.php/english/offshore/platform-anodes
I'd not expect more than about 0.4v... The 500 mA you measured would account for the largest part of a kg loss of zinc, or an equivalent loss of zinc and aluminium, over a 2 month period...
Thanks Vic, but where are you getting these figures?
Thanks for the info. The 500mA was with me shorting the engine to the ground (keel) with the ammeter, I hope the normal current is somewhat less.The 0.4volt from a galvanic series table...
IIRC you reported that you could measure 500mA current flow between the engine and what you refer to as ground...
BTW I am inclined to think that your saildrive was never isolated from the engine, nor intended to be
Thanks for the info. The 500mA was with me shorting the engine to the ground (keel) with the ammeter, I hope the normal current is somewhat less.
I'm inclined to believe the same, otherwise why have to grounding relays.
This is drifting the thread and creating another discussing your problem. I will PM you