[Public-List] questions about bronze fasteners
George Dinwiddie
gdinwiddie at alberg30.org
Tue May 10 12:11:34 PDT 2011
On 5/10/11 8:54 AM, Gordon Laco wrote:
> There are alloys of bronze that are 'stronger' than stainless steel... An
> example would be aluminium bronze. However, most such alloys are
> considerably more expensive than stainless steel. Because there are so
> many alloys of bronze available, it is important to have good reasons to
> have faith in the veracity of your bronze gear's maker's claims of what
> alloy they supply. That's a whole separate topic and I have amusing stories
> I could tell with a beer in front of me.
Do you know how, in general, aluminum bronze compares with silicon
bronze in a marine environment? I've noticed that off-cuts of aluminum
bronze are generally available on eBay, but not much silicon bronze.
> Another issue with stainless steel is that it needs to be exposed to O2 in
> air for the anti-corrosive properties 'work'. It is for this reason that
> appropriate alloys of bronze are better for fastenings in places where they
> will live buried in the materials they hold or underwater, than stainless
> steel. So wrapping it with too much tape, or putting plastic bags over
> various rigging components (or anything) during winter lay-ups are counter
> productive practices when dealing with stainless steel rigging.
I've got a good photo of what happens with underwater stainless on
http://alberg30.org/maintenance/Steering/CreviceCorrosion/
- George
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