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Strong....cheap...non corrosive material

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GREG1957

Marine/Ocean
Oct 4, 2016
3
Picture a mine headgear in 50m of sea water sat in a strong current, what materials would you use? It must be strong, and last at least 20 years, is this possible at a realistic price.
I would be glad for any thoughts.
 
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Lee Composites website will get you started.
 
Thinking more about it, extra thickness on your structural steel might get your 20 years at the lowest price.
 
I assume that the Romans would have used copper rod or bronze for reinforcing their concrete structures
 
The Romans substituted gravity for their reinforcing. Gravity doesn't rust.
 
"...Gravity doesn't rust." neither does marine bronze.
 
Bronze decays at a rate that is infinitely faster than the rate at which gravity fails.
Designing a structure so that it is all in compression is the best bet regardless of the material.
Very few materials like being under tension in seawater.

= = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = = =
P.E. Metallurgy, Plymouth Tube
 
Too bad you could't make it out of old fiberglass runabouts, of which there seems to be a huge supply.


Mike Halloran
Pembroke Pines, FL, USA
 
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