Re: Question about Alodine 1201

Re: Question about Alodine 1201

  Home | Guides | Register Now! | Search | About
 rec.aviation.homebuilt    Post an article   get this group's latest topics as an RSS feed add this group's latest topics to your My MSN content add this group's latest topics to your My Yahoo content
 Re: Question about Alodine 1201 larry Reply Send to a Friend   Print
 
Subject Author Date
Question about Alodine 1201 Andrew Sarangan 04-05-2006
>Can you explain what you mean by Clad coating?

Well... Aluminum is a whitish-gray material, not slick and shiny like
the sheet metal you buy. The sheetmetal product, and much plate stock,
is almost always 'clad-coated' and to my knowledge, not available any
other way. That shiny stuff is the 'clad' which is simply more
aluminum that has been pressed tightly to eliminate natural porosity.
Of course, the *process* has changed over the years but the result is
the same: shiny and slick sheetmetal.

Beneath the clad coating is "raw" aluminum. This has been the bugaboo
of corrosion problems among many. Raw aluminum is quite reactive to
air and water and protects itself with an oxide layer of white powder
(that also turns mysteriously black when you handle it -- kinda weird).
Depending on alloy, once the raw surface is exposed, the oxide layer
can go quite deep -- often deeper than the sheetstock IS. The clad
coating, while still aluminum, keeps corrsion at bay to a much greater
extent because it reacts far, far, slower than 'raw' aluminum. Once
this clad is gone, all bets are off.

Sanding or etching removes this coating pretty much every time. Once
removed, you're gonna hafta treat that surface pretty quickly with
aluminum specific coating (like alodine). Another poster quite rightly
pointed out that color isn't supposed to be very 'deep'. "Well-done
fried chicken" brown is too deep. "Light Honey" brown might be more
appropriate. Gotta go, getting hungry alla sudden :-)

Larry



other useful resources:
Government National Mortgage Association - Ginnie Mae
The National Home Equity Mortgage Association
Fannie Mae Mortgage
Movie-Corner.com Movie Blog