T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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560.1 | Black Anodized Repair Kit | AKOV04::KALINOWSKI | | Mon May 18 1987 12:55 | 32 |
| If the anodized aluminum is black, I've got a solution.
SSI in chicago sells a repair kit. it has 3 bottles of about 2 oz
each. to use it.
1. sand the area with 800 wet dry to get most of the scratches out
(if the aluminum has been gouged).
2. wash the area with soap and water.
3. spread a bit of the contents of bottle #1 on the area. This is
a mild acid wash that clean up any oxidation on the aluminum. after
10 mins, wash off with clean water.
4. spread a bit of the contents of bottle #2 on the area. this is
a chemical that bolds the anodize paint to the aluminum. you
leave this on for about 5 mins until the aluminum turns a
golden color.
5. spread the black paint in bottle #3 on the area. let dry and
your are all done. The stuff stays on too. the kit sells for
about $8 and lasts a long time doing repair work.
when you are done, the new section will be shiny and your old
section will look dull. wash and wax the whole thing the next day,
and everything will look like new.
john
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560.2 | Easy Methods are available | CSSE::GARDINER | | Mon May 18 1987 13:27 | 13 |
| Several years ago I bought a product called Alum-A-Clean and its
companion product Alum-A-Coat. It was easy to clean the mast and
boom and it took most of the discoloration out of my 20 year old
aluminum. When I put on the Coating it freshened it up to look
almost new. Been a few years and it still looks good.
I believe I bought them through BOAT/US, but could have been Goldberg
Marine. I do most of my shopping through discount catalogs.
Good luck.
|
560.3 | cleaning spars... | MCS873::KALINOWSKI | | Mon Nov 21 1994 11:03 | 18 |
|
For non-anodized spars, I found a cheap way to clean them.
After stripping the rigging for refit, the mast looked dirty from
20 years of use. Black streaks, dull finish, scratches abound.
I sprayed on Automobile wheel cleaner for non-clear coated alm. wheels.
This contains a mild acid in it. They say to let it stand 2 minutes
before hosing off. I would spray a 10 foot section, and work it in
with fine nylon scrub pad. After 5 minutes, I would hose it off
throughly.
Once done, I put a thin coat of paste wax on it. The spars look
like new. Compared to wet sanding the spars or al. polish, this is the
quickest method to deal with this chore.
john
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560.4 | How can I tell if it is anodized? | PCBUOA::MWEBER | The wind is free. Use it. | Wed Jan 04 1995 10:08 | 8 |
| John, How can I tell if the mast / boom have been anodized?
Do they have a different look? I trust that cleaning
anodized aluminum is a different process than non-anodized
aluminum, true? Also, does one stand up to the salt water
better than the other?
Michael Weber
"Latitude"
|
560.5 | | MCS873::KALINOWSKI | | Wed Jan 25 1995 17:47 | 8 |
| Michael
Ussually anodized alluimun is black. It is like a low gloss power
coating. If you scratch it, the normal allumin color will come through.
Having seen your boat, it looks like a plain aluminum mast to me. I
don't think you had a clearcoat on it.
john
|
560.6 | home shop anodizing | OFOSS1::GINGER | Ron Ginger | Wed Jan 25 1995 20:16 | 14 |
| Anodizing does not have to be black. The anodizing process provides a
protective coating, the color is just a dye process used to 'pretty
it'. So an 'aluminum color' would just be anodized and no dye.
Its an interesting process. The part is dunked in H2SO4, and hooked to
a power source. A lead plate provides the other electrode- I forget the
polarity. After a time in the solution the part is removed and can be
dunked in dye. For home shop use RIT -the stuff used to dye fabric-
works fine. You dip the part in the dye, then into boiling water to
seal it.
Needs a big tank for a mast, but small parts can quite eaisly be done
in home shops. Many articles on it in various Model engineering
magazines.
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560.7 | | OFOSS1::GINGER | Ron Ginger | Wed Jan 25 1995 20:20 | 6 |
| I believe all aluminum used around boats is anodized. Certailnly all
that is made into products like cleats, blocks, winches, etc. The only
exception might be a part made from simple strip or sheet stock, maybe
a chain plate or such. these will corrode rapidly without anodizing.
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560.8 | | POBOX::ROGERS | hard on the wind again | Fri Jan 27 1995 15:07 | 6 |
| Assassin got a whole slew of parts anodized a few years ago. All colors
but one faded. Gold anodizing on the mast bracket, the tiller hub and
the spin pole forward fitting look like brand new. sun can't touch it.
Black turns to grey and red.....well, it just evaporates completely.
|