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T9 BoeShield and Corrosion
marinettejoe
#1 Posted : Tuesday, December 04, 2007 12:21:09 PM(UTC)
marinettejoe

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I have been told that Boeshield T9 is the best Marine anticorrision spray. It's a waxy coating used on the engine and on many other metal parts.

Anyone ever use this?
Unzinced ships sink at slips. yep
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jralbert
#2 Posted : Wednesday, December 05, 2007 3:54:37 AM(UTC)
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Joe: some years ago, the now-defunct PowerBoat Reports had a piece comparing various spray products. Boeshield didn't do very well on its claims for exterior protection. But I would guess that it is probably ok for your engine since it's not exposed (we hope) to the elements. You are correct to ask which product did score high. My memory has a synapse disconnection on that.
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marinettejoe
#3 Posted : Wednesday, December 05, 2007 6:53:40 AM(UTC)
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I've heard a lot of hoohah. I may go back to food grade silicone oil.
Unzinced ships sink at slips. yep
dougrose
#4 Posted : Friday, December 07, 2007 5:09:44 AM(UTC)
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My understanding is that Boeshield was developed specifically to protect aircraft structure from corrosion. Aircraft are all aluminum, but the rivets are necessarily a different alloy from the skins and bulkheads, and the high-strength alloys (2024 T3 or 7075) used are rich in copper and zinc and poor in corrosion resistance. Even Alclad, which has a sheet of strong stuff sandwiched between two sheets of pure aluminum, leaves the edges unprotected.

I have seen it used with success inside rockets, which sit for a long time on the pad in the World's Worst Corrosion Environment (tm), and also inside seaplanes, although Lake Amphibian now has something stronger. It looks like amber undercoating.

On my own aircraft I used Boeshield whenever I had a panel off, and regularly inside the fuselage and wings where I could reach. In a dozen years of operation a stone's throw from the saltwater, I never saw any corrosion.

I was not aware that it can be used outside. I think it would be better to use paint.


1975 32' Flybridge Sedan, twin Perkins 6-354 diesels, 1:1.53 velvetdrives, 16 X 19 props. Merritt Island, Florida
clarko
#5 Posted : Tuesday, December 11, 2007 1:07:12 PM(UTC)
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Hi Joe, I've used it and it seemed to work well. I used back in the early nineties when we took a sailboat on a 5 month cruise from L. Mich. to Jacksonville, Fla, and used it on the rigging. I felt we would be in considerable salt water and wanted protection. I havn't felt the need now because we're on fresh water and almost everything in the boat is stainless, alum. or painted.
marinettejoe
#6 Posted : Wednesday, December 12, 2007 11:11:12 AM(UTC)
marinettejoe

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I will try it and see. It'll be on the short list to stay away pblaster.
Unzinced ships sink at slips. yep
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