Galvanic Bolt Corrosion Question
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I have a question about galvanic corrosion. I see a lot of bolts with stainless hangers on carbon steel bolts. I know this is bad. My question is would a plated steel hanger (ala Fixe) on a carbon steel bolt (ala 1/2" Rawl 5-piece) be better? Worse? Would the plated steel work like a "sacrificial anode", and corrode first, saving the bolt for a while? |
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All of the Rawl 5-piece bolts I've seen that are not stainless, are also plated (usually with zinc). If you have a plated bolt, it is best to put a plated hanger on it, not stainless. It can be difficult to find non-stainless hangers though. |
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So did they ever make non-plated 5 piece bolts? What about during the 80's? I have seen some new plated steel 5-piece bolts that are much more shiny than some of the older ones. Do they dull over time? |
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Ben Sachs wrote:Do they dull over time? Yeah, and that's what they're designed to do. The zinc plating forms an oxide, which is the barrier for any other corrosion issues. |
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just a side note, a route that i climbed this weekend was put up in the late 90's with carbon/plated bolts and stainless hangers. there was a substantial amount of rust on the bolt and nut. this was in CO. |
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slim wrote:just a side note, a route that i climbed this weekend was put up in the late 90's with carbon/plated bolts and stainless hangers. there was a substantial amount of rust on the bolt and nut. this was in CO. i have seen this too. maybe even on the same route ;) |
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I like the idea of a sacrificial anode. I wonder how long a strip of magnesium ribbon twisted around a hanger would last. |
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that's a good question. i've been running into a similar situation at work. |
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Peter Springs wrote:Somewhat related, and worth looking at just to see what *can* happen: cascadeclimbers.com/forum/u… Pretty sure those Kong hangers were aluminum. Not galvanic corrosion, IMHO. |
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The inside of the hole tends to stay wet and thus the corrosive process continues around the clock. ALso, the threads on the bolt are the thinnest part of the system and they are necessary for pullout strength (and it all comes down to pullout). Being thin, they wear out faster with corrosion. |
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Brian in SLC wrote: Pretty sure those Kong hangers were aluminum. Not galvanic corrosion, IMHO. Could be, lot's of speculation about it. Either way, it'd still be a reaction between 2 different metal types. Certainly gives pause for thought seeing it happen so out-right. |
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What about any galvanic degredation between bolt hangers and quick links? Are most quick links stainless? I am Looking to put in some quick links for cleaning anchors is there any advice or things i should know? Thanks |
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R. Moran wrote:What about any galvanic degredation between bolt hangers and quick links? Are most quick links stainless? I am Looking to put in some quick links for cleaning anchors is there any advice or things i should know? Thanks I've been looking at this as well. I don't recall where I read it, probably over on Supertopo, but someone suggested a good compromise. Use stainless bolts and hangers, and plated quicklinks and lowering rings. |
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Rich Farnham wrote: I've been looking at this as well. I don't recall where I read it, probably over on Supertopo, but someone suggested a good compromise. Use stainless bolts and hangers, and plated quicklinks and lowering rings. I'd love to do the whole thing in stainless, but I'm not made of money. The advantage of this set-up is the only potential for galvanic corrosion occurs outside the hole where it is likely to be dry and is also easy to monitor. All of the lowering happens on cheaper plated rings, and can easily be replaced. I'd love to hear feedback on this set-up, as this is what I'm likely to start doing in anchor setups that I expect will see significant use. that sounds fine; as you said the only place where significant corrosion would occur is outside the hole. i've been plated quick links with carabiners at anchors and like it very much. |
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Seems pretty standard to use the plated links. Stainless links are available at most hardware stores but its very expensive. $2.50 vs $7.50 where I live plated v. stainless for 5/16" links. I've seen setups like this where the links were super rusty, but the bolt and hanger were fine. Slap some new links/rings on there, good to go for another 10 yrs. |
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I have also noticed a big difference on the strength rating between the expensive and cheap. The cheap are ~15-1700lbs v.s. the expensive @ 5000lbs. I know that we are just lowering but is there any argument for the more expensive stronger? It seems that 1500lbs would be plenty to lower off. Thanks |
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Make sure you are comparing the same numbers. Links often show "working load" which is typically 20% of ultimate strength. The 3/8" quicklinks I use say 2200 lbs working load, so an ultimate strength of 11,000 lbs. |
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Brian in SLC wrote: Note that hangers that are zinc plated are pretty hard to paint, unless you use a zinc rich primer (and/or a primer made specifically for use on zinc plating). Best to buy them prepainted. Most of the Rust-o-leum primers won't work. If you read the fine print closely, you'll see most of them say, "not for use on galvanized surfaces". Which means zinc plated. Stainless hangers take paint/primer much better. Random bump. I've found the answer to painting plated hangers (and stainless to a lesser degree). |
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mattm wrote: Random bump. I've found the answer to painting plated hangers (and stainless to a lesser degree). It turns out that "normal" spray paint like Rustoleum have chemicals that react with the zinc or galvanized coating. This reaction basically forms a layer of "soap" under the dried pain meaning it doesn't stick AT ALL. What you want is LATEX based spray paint. Krylon makes one called H2O Latex paint (found on Amazon). The Latex paint uses different chemicals that don't form the "soap". I've had good results with this on Fixe Plated hangers as well as stainless. The latex seems to stick pretty well and chips FAR LESS than the Rustoleum. Give it a whirl. It should be noted that you should NEVER paint or purchase powder coated hangers for use in a marine environment or for use where there is runoff water containing salt or chlorides. |




