basilkies wrote:
It's a no brainer, stainless is only good as stainless when it is exposed to the
air. I can't go into the science of it but once it is in an airless environment it loses its stainless property and can rust.
Hello everybody!
If I understand this problem correctly, there seems to be a lot of misunderstanding here.
Stainless steel does not loose it`s properties when covered or encapsulated!
In the yard where I work(Norway) we build the biggest oilrigs in the world with tons and tons of stainless on them, some of it painted, some not.These rigs are built with a life expectancy of 50-70 years!!
And all of this in the harshest most corrosive environments in the world.
They wouldn`t use stainless if this was a problem!!, but on the contrary this is why they use stainless,it corrodes at a much slower pace than most other materials!!. AND yes,it will corrode eventually! Nothing lasts forever.
Encapsulate a stainless bolt with epoxy,let it cure,throw it in the sea,and I am sure the bolt will long outlast any of us!!
It is watertight and airtight,so nothing will happen until the epoxy is broken down,it gets wet and nature will eventually reclaim what belongs to nature.Too far into the future!!
Isn`t this the reason we encapsulate our boats with fiberglass and epoxy?? To make everything last as long as possible,Not for eternity!
Crevice corrosion is a totally different ballgame,but this will only concern "stuff" put onto the hull on the outside of the protective epoxy layer which will/can get in contact with water.
All the best
Helge