Electrolysis aboard sailing vessels
Many sailors are aware of the potential hazards aboard their vessels that they can
not see. These sailors check their hardware, or have the yard check their
hardware before spring launch. Of course, in some latitudes spring never arrives,
so the standing rigging is rarely checked.
Many other sailors are totally unaware of the inherit dangers of using dissimilar
metals in their standing rigging. These sailors
are completely surprised when their vessel
is dis-masted or some other disaster strikes
due to lack of routine maintenance.
When aluminum masts were first introduced
and continuing on to today most of the
fasteners used to assemble and install the mast
was some grade of stainless steel. When
aluminum and stainless are joined, electrolytic
action begins. The result of this action, over
time, is the corrosion of one or both of of the joined metals.
An example of corrosion that caused such a disaster follows. The mast and
spreaders that were involved in a
dis-masting are pictured below.
Photo at right shows the mast and
sail track.
On older vessels, this was from a 1972
Ranger Sloop, the main sail was attached to the mast via the sail track.
The sail track was made up of sections
of stainless which were screwed to the
aluminum mast using small round head stainless steel screws.
If you note the screw holes in Figure one below, it shows complete corrosion of
the screw at the aluminum/stainless joint. Figure two shows extensive corrosion
of the solid end of the spreader.
The stainless shroud was partially supported by the attachment at the spreader.
Again, a stainless to aluminum attachment was in place.
The vessel operator does not remember the the exact sequence of events during
the dis-masting, only that the main sail pulled partially (about fifteen feet) away
from the mast and the mast began to fall rapidly to starboard and break off at the
deck. My investigation indicated that when the main sail pulled away from the
mast because the track failed, it pulled the shroud away from the corroded
spreader. The mast was then unsupported and the gust was strong enough to
break the mast off.