i think andrew already mentioned the galvanic corrosion? or some sort of chemical reaction between the copper and aluminum? i have always been told to use something BESIDES copper anti-seize on aluminum, or anywhere that a part will come in contact with aluminum. ive never personally seen a case of copper anti seize eating aluminum, but ive never questioned it either.
You'd want to look into galvanic corrosion to understand. When zinc and aluminum come into contact with an electrolyte between them, the zinc is sacrificed and oxidized. When copper and aluminum come into contact with an electrolyte between them, aluminum is sacrificed and oxidized and the reaction happens 3 times faster than it does between zinc an aluminum.
Quote from: libbybapa on May 08, 2010, 07:30:37 pmYou'd want to look into galvanic corrosion to understand. When zinc and aluminum come into contact with an electrolyte between them, the zinc is sacrificed and oxidized. When copper and aluminum come into contact with an electrolyte between them, aluminum is sacrificed and oxidized and the reaction happens 3 times faster than it does between zinc an aluminum.If you google "aluminum boat anode" somewhere you'll see what they use to protect the aluminum engine from dissolving in the salt waters :-D Hint, its not copper.
Quote from: arb on May 08, 2010, 09:27:02 pmQuote from: libbybapa on May 08, 2010, 07:30:37 pmYou'd want to look into galvanic corrosion to understand. When zinc and aluminum come into contact with an electrolyte between them, the zinc is sacrificed and oxidized. When copper and aluminum come into contact with an electrolyte between them, aluminum is sacrificed and oxidized and the reaction happens 3 times faster than it does between zinc an aluminum.If you google "aluminum boat anode" somewhere you'll see what they use to protect the aluminum engine from dissolving in the salt waters :-D Hint, its not copper.just think of this, we build the entire damn boat out of aluminum, we put a couple zincs on all our boats usually. all boats that roll out of the shop get zincs.and salt water will still corrode an aluminum engine block over time if you dont flush them out regularly. and an automotive engine in a boat never lasts that long either, head gaskets are different material. boat engines get stainless ringed head gaskets.
and salt water will still corrode an aluminum engine block over time if you dont flush them out regularly. and an automotive engine in a boat never lasts that long either, head gaskets are different material. boat engines get stainless ringed head gaskets.