Firefly625
Well-Known Member
I see your point VicS. I have briefly thought about whether, as far as electrolytic corrosion on the seawater side is concerned, the urine can serve as the "solid connection" but then you get into complexity about electrolysis going on on the urine side too. I don't know, and will happily back down on the "pool of urine" argument
I still suspect there is an actual solid connection where the shaft passes through the body and where the shaft's retainer nuts contact the body. Do you think differently? Do you think they are fully isolated by plastic components, so they never touch? I thought the seal was made only by the contact of the ball with the plastic material whose edge you can see if you look up the pipe, and that there was no sealing required where the shaft passes through the body. In other words, it's metal on metal where the shaft passes through the body, I think. I'll be corrected if you know better but that's how I recall the standard form of seacock construction
I think a quality seacock would use a minimal quantity of plastic... precise engineering would ensure ball closure was exact and total. Plastics in time may break up causing failure .... just a thought.
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