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Galvanic Series
Using the list below, you can get a fairly good idea how vulnerable a fitting might be to galvanic corrosion. A fitting made of a metal at the bottom of the scale will waste away in seawater if it is in contact with a fitting made of a metal at the top. Fittings will be damaged more quickly in saltwater than in freshwater, but it is also possible for galvanic corrosion to take place when dissimilar metals are out of the water. In general, the farther apart the two metals are on the scale, the more likely the anodic metal will be damaged.
Cathodic
- Graphite
- Monel
- Stainless Steel
- Bronze
- Brass
- Copper
- Tin
- Mild Steel
- Aluminum
- Zinc
Anodic
- Magnesium
NOTE: Galvanic series are frequently published that seem to disagree slightly. For example, some brasses may be listed ahead of bronze, or vice versa. This has to do with variations of the alloys, as well the electrolyte.
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Corrosion and Galvanic Isolators
Lets say you dutifully put anodes on your outdrives in early spring, which, in years past, has always been sufficient to protect the outdrives from galvanic corrosion for an entire season. But midway through the season, the anodes are mysteriously gone; dangling screws are the only indication they were ever there. The outdrive is no longer being protected. What happened?
The likely answer has to do with shore power. Galvanic corrosion occurs whenever two dissimilar metals are immersed in electrolyte and the metals are connected by direct contact or by an external wire. In the case above, the external wire was the shore power cord.
The rules governing galvanic corrosion are exactly the same regardless of whether they're in direct contact or connected by the shore power ground wire. There wont be corrosion if all of the underwater fittings on all of the boats are made with the same metal — bronze, for example. If, however, there is an imbalance of metals among the boats, which is likely, then galvanic corrosion starts dissolving the least noble metal.
For example: several large cruisers are plugged into shore power on the same pier as an inboard center console with an aluminum outdrive. The cruisers all have bronze and stainless steel fittings under the water (rudder, shafts, props) and no anodes. If there is an anode on the center consoles outdrive, the anode will begin to quickly waste away. As the anode is dissolved, the least noble metal on any of the connected boats — in this case, the center consoles outdrive — will begin corroding.
Another possible situation: Several boats with aluminum outdrives are plugged into AC power on the same pier. Some are protected with anodes and some aren't. Initially, outdrives that aren't protected will be protected by the other boats anodes. Conversely, the protected boats will find their anodes are dissolving quicker. All it takes is one boat that isn't protected to affect other boats that have less noble underwater fittings. As the anodes are worn down, all of the boats outdrives will be vulnerable to galvanic corrosion.
The source of the corrosion isn't always apparent and there is no instant fix, short of constantly replacing your boats anodes. If you unplug the shore power cord, you (and the boat) wont have the benefit of AC appliances like battery chargers and refrigeration. Another quick fix — interrupting the circuit by cutting the green grounding wire on your boat — means the AC electrical system will no longer be grounded and anyone in the water near your boat runs the considerable risk of being electrocuted by stray AC current. Even a few milliamps of AC electricity in the water can paralyze a swimmers muscles, causing him or her to drown.
The most common way to reliably and safely interrupt the circuit is to install a galvanic isolator. Galvanic isolators attach to the green grounding wire to limit galvanic current flow (up to about 1.2 volts) between neighboring boats while also allowing dangerous AC current to safely pass through to the ground on shore. The most efficient galvanic isolators have a capacitor, which allow the isolator to continue to block galvanic DC current flow even if there is a small AC current leakage on the ground wire.
Protection can also be provided, typically on larger boats and aluminum boats, with an isolation transformer. The latter is much more expensive but will also protect the boats AC system from shoreside power surges.
Isolators are rated in two sizes: 30- amp and 50-amp. A boat with a 30-amp cable needs a 30-amp isolator. A boat with a 50-amp cable needs a 50-amp isolator. If a boat has two shore power inputs, it needs separate 30-amp isolators for each input.
Just when all of this galvanic corrosion business starts to make sense, there may be instances involving corrosion that defy logic, such as when a more noble metal becomes severely corroded, leaving a less noble metal unharmed. This is likely the effect of stray current corrosion, which can drive normally cathodic metals to become anodic (see below).
Stray Current Corrosion
Q: If placing two dissimilar metals in an electrolyte creates low-voltage DC current that can wreck unprotected metals in a matter of months, what would happen if all of the current from a boats 12-volt batteries were to somehow come in contact with metal?
A: The metal fittings in contact with the bilge water would be in a lot of trouble — and are likely to be wrecked in a few days or even hours.
While less common than galvanic corrosion, stray current corrosion is typically swift and deadly. There have been boats that were sunk when someone carelessly left a battery cable dangling in bilge water. All of the underwater fittings (bronze) were pink and nearly crumbling in only a few days. In other cases, crimped wires in the bilge were "leaking" 12-volt current into the bilge water.
Stray current is one reason DC wires should always be well above bilge water levels. (AC wires must also be kept well away from the bilge! Although they dont cause corrosion, AC wires in water pose a dangerous shock hazard.)
If a DC wire must be left in the bilge (e.g., mast wires left short at the base), they should be enclosed in a weatherproof junction box to seal out moisture, or individually sealed in heat shrink tubing and secured as high as possible. Liquid electrical tape or corrosion inhibitor sprays can also help to seal terminals from dampness that may infiltrate enclosed junction boxes.