boatrus
Marine/Ocean
- Sep 23, 2011
- 3
I am replacing marine chain-plates on a 28 yo boat that are encapsulated in the hull.
The original plates corroded in two places --typical anaerobic SCC-- on questionable 316 SS (unknown chemistry). So my question is, what better metal choices do I have for fiberglass encapsulated metals in a marine environment?
Some choices I have looked at include:
1. Nitronic 50
2. Grade 5 Ti
3. Monel 400
I have seen a flurry of topics on other 'possible' alloy metals, so there's a typical set of needs, such a rigging loads, costs, availability, and machining, welding, etc. (The original 13mm 316 handled the loads without issue for 28 years, with some elongation in the clevis pin area of approximately 1 to 2%.)
While it is true that the original 316(?) did last ~25 years, I would still like to look at perhaps better replacement possibilities as it is possible this boat will be around for quite some time. (BTW, outside chain-plates are not an option.)
-Thanks.
More Info:
The plates are 46mm x 13mm and 105mm x 13mm bar with butt-end welds for hull anchor arms and legs, with a neck length of ~650mm.
Originally embedded in a polyester resin but will be replaced with either vinyl-ester or epoxy resin bedding.
A new two-part design will be used with an overlapping part (originally one-piece) that will overlap on the glass with the embedded part, assembled with custom flanged cap hex 'pin' shoulder bolts held in-place with tacked-on flanged nuts, whereby the threads only support clamping pressure and not shear (placed on the shoulder pins only).
These custom made bolts and nuts will be made with the same material as the plate.
With the two-piece design, the top part can be removed for inspection while the anchor part will be sealed in the hull. To avoid overlap of metal parts, the fiberglass bedding should prevent crevices formation between the two overlapping metal parts.
A two-part design should also permit totally sealing the embedded part from moisture whereas the original design allowed deck water to invade down to the embedded hull anchor, since it was a common compartment from hull up to the deck opening.
If you have Google Sketchup8 (download for free at google.com) or another CAD system, you can use my SKP file attached to view the proposed 3D design.
The original plates corroded in two places --typical anaerobic SCC-- on questionable 316 SS (unknown chemistry). So my question is, what better metal choices do I have for fiberglass encapsulated metals in a marine environment?
Some choices I have looked at include:
1. Nitronic 50
2. Grade 5 Ti
3. Monel 400
I have seen a flurry of topics on other 'possible' alloy metals, so there's a typical set of needs, such a rigging loads, costs, availability, and machining, welding, etc. (The original 13mm 316 handled the loads without issue for 28 years, with some elongation in the clevis pin area of approximately 1 to 2%.)
While it is true that the original 316(?) did last ~25 years, I would still like to look at perhaps better replacement possibilities as it is possible this boat will be around for quite some time. (BTW, outside chain-plates are not an option.)
-Thanks.
More Info:
The plates are 46mm x 13mm and 105mm x 13mm bar with butt-end welds for hull anchor arms and legs, with a neck length of ~650mm.
Originally embedded in a polyester resin but will be replaced with either vinyl-ester or epoxy resin bedding.
A new two-part design will be used with an overlapping part (originally one-piece) that will overlap on the glass with the embedded part, assembled with custom flanged cap hex 'pin' shoulder bolts held in-place with tacked-on flanged nuts, whereby the threads only support clamping pressure and not shear (placed on the shoulder pins only).
These custom made bolts and nuts will be made with the same material as the plate.
With the two-piece design, the top part can be removed for inspection while the anchor part will be sealed in the hull. To avoid overlap of metal parts, the fiberglass bedding should prevent crevices formation between the two overlapping metal parts.
A two-part design should also permit totally sealing the embedded part from moisture whereas the original design allowed deck water to invade down to the embedded hull anchor, since it was a common compartment from hull up to the deck opening.
If you have Google Sketchup8 (download for free at google.com) or another CAD system, you can use my SKP file attached to view the proposed 3D design.