macd
Well-Known Member
Apart from the mechanical properties of copper as described by Vyv it also loses its antifouling properties when cathodically protected. If there is an anode to protect the prop it will also "protect" the copper plating and completely remove any antifouling effect.
I think you've got that wrong. Anodes protect against galvanic corrosion, which is not the issue. Copper is fairly noble but in salt water will succumb to chemical change (unrelated to galvanic effects). Elemental copper (and later Muntz metal) was after all used for many decades on wooden hulls as combined antifouling and barrier protection against Toredo worm. But, as Vyv writes, copper plating is probably too soft to resist the extreme turbulence of life on a prop, where it will be likely to erode mechanically.