oldsaltoz
Well-Known Member
Just make sure the copper based grease is removed from the boat, if it ever gets pumped into the prop shaft casing you will have a real problem, the water removed the grease but not the copper.
In the nuclear industry we do(did?) have special SS/Monel transitions. Admittedly we were dealing with high temperatures and pressures in the primary cooling circcuits, but I have seen test pieces done in workshop conditions fail under test at very much smaller reduced loads than design. We operated a strict ban on copper in ant form coming into contact with SS and I've kept to the rule ever since.
I personaly use a colloidal nickel product on any threads on my boat; some stainless steels contain nickel in any case, so I figure it can't do any harm.
PS probably expensive stuff, but it was a free sample from a potential supplier many years ago that was going to be binned, before I intercepted it!
The fact that riggers use bucketloads of copper grease means little to me. I've seen "craftmen" bodge a lot of things, secure in the knowlege that they'll be far away when the **** hits the fan. I did a five year marine engineering apprenticeship before attending uni and I'm well aware of what passes for "skilled labour" in the boat industry.