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Thanks Frank. We just got the boat last fall so the paint on the strut is from PO. I didn't know there could be issues from bottom paint on the bronze. I'm going to strip the paint so I'll give a closer inspection. There were two zincs on the shaft as well. One was significantly more degraded so I figured they just didn't bother to take off the previous years'. In my limited research thus far, apparently it's possible to over-zinc. I'm with you, I can't see how a small hole is going to weaken the strut significantly. I, too, will be interested in other folks' experience.This seems to be a somewhat controversial issue, based on feedback from various boat yards. I don't have a zinc anode on our 1984 strut.
I've been told to check it carefully on haulout for any sign of it turning pink, but so far there is none. One yard said there is no harm in adding a zinc, but another said that drilling a hole thru it to place a zinc plate on either side would weaken it. I'm not sure a quarter inch hole would be a problem, but he just shrugged his shoulders when I said so.
I do have two zincs on the prop shaft, which is close by, but the cutless bearing rubber insulates the strut from the shaft, so I'm not sure if the prop shaft zincs have any positive effect on the strut.
I'll be interested in what others advise, as I've seen lots of boats with, and lots without, a strut zinc.
Also, I note that you have bottom painted the strut with bottom paint. I have heard that the copper may react with the strut bronze, so I don't put bottom paint on mine.
Frank
Thanks Christian. That will help if I decide to put one in.Here's my strut, before bottom job and new shaft. Inherited placement of both zincs, no special knowledge.
Should I add a zinc to the strut (in addition to replacing the one on the shaft)?
Copper and bronzes are really close together on the galvanic series, I doubt that copper bottom paint would be worse than nothing on a bronze strut.I have heard that the copper may react with the strut bronze, so I don't put bottom paint on mine.
True. If memory serves, bronze alloys are in the range of 70% copper. The plot thickens.Copper and bronzes are really close together on the galvanic series, I doubt that copper bottom paint would be worse than nothing on a bronze strut.
Thanks Ray. I really like having differing experiences and solutions to consider. Your input is very helpful. For the 35 years before we got it, our boat was in a slip in a small crowded marina a long mile up a tidal river, with a month or two every year at Martha's Vineyard. We'll be on a mooring in a harbor of Narragansett Bay, in salt water with robust tidal movement. It hadn't occurred to me to consider how this difference might affect our decision. Interesting that your strut zinc took most of the heat.. . . I drilled a hole and put a 3" disc zinc on the new one ever since. I have had no problem in all those years and 20K+miles, but I have two ziincs on the shaft and one on the feathering propeller as well. But the disc on the strut is the one that is most eaten on the seasonal haulout--the others seem hardly touched-. . . I don't think this proves much because it matters how much electricity and metalyou are fighting in the water . . . But i have asked a lot of boatyard guys and they say you really cannot over zinc a fiberglass boat . . .
Thanks Dave. Diggin' the Maine ambience, too.Here are pictures of my strut on my Ericson 35-3. The first picture was taken before I replaced the sacrificial zinc on the shaft, the second afterwards. There is no sacrificial zinc on the strut itself.
Hope that helps!
Dave
I wonder if you paint your strut, or leave it bare? I would think that a bare strut would accelerate the consumption of zinc.But the disc on the strut is the one that is most eaten on the seasonal haulout--the others seem hardly touched--but it is only 7 months in the water.
I wonder if you paint your strut, or leave it bare? I would think that a bare strut would accelerate the consumption of zinc.
I think the question is whether the copper in the paint would conduct and cause corrosion. And I don't have an answer yet. I did a little more research and bronze is more like 85%+ copper. Tin is a typical alloy, but many others exist.I wonder if you paint your strut, or leave it bare? I would think that a bare strut would accelerate the consumption of zinc.
Hi @Pete the Cat ,Dave, where are you in Maine? I am sure I have been there.
In answer to whether or not I paint my strut, I have painted it and left it bare. The copper paint does discolor and appears to pit the bronze strut a bit when I cleaned it up, so I stopped doing it. The strut does not really get funky because the propeller and regular use keeps the barnacles from attaching.