Psychohillbilly wrote: My concern in bolting together aluminum is galvanic corrosion :shock: Galvanic corrosion occurs when two dissimilar metals or alloys are in contact with each other and exposed to water. Most metals have different solution potentials, in a water environment. When two metals are physically touching, the difference in potential results in a current flow. The rate of corrosion increases when the potential between the two metals is high. Sence the trailer frame is expossed to water I am concerned that corrosion would set in between the bolt and frame resulting in the conection loosening up over a period of time.
The psychohillbilly
Having flown hang gliders and ultralight aircraft since 1981, I've got some experience with galvanic (or electrolytic) corrosion.
Most hang gliders and ultralight aircraft are made from 2024-T6 or similar aluminum alloy seamless tubing. The tubing is usually held together by 1/8" thick aluminum plate of similar alloys. AN (aircraft) bolts and hardware are used to secure the plates and tubing.
The AN bolts are steel, plated with cadmium, and in theory the aluminum contacts the cadmium instead of the steel. In practice, airframe vibration eventually wears off the cadmium plating so the steel does touch the aluminum. I have removed such bolts from 20-year-old aluminum airframes and found no corrosion on the aluminum. The corrosion is on the steel bolt instead, in the form of rust! The rust is often confined to the portion of the bolt that is inside the tubing, where humid air is trapped and the moisture remains as the air cools.
I have found corrosion on aluminum in two instances, neither related to contact with steel. The first instance was a piece of sealed aluminum tubing, a wing strut. It had whitish/grayish corrosion inside that appeared to have been formed when wet, salty air got caught inside as the tubing heated and cooled outdoors. The second instance was on an aluminum keel mounted to the bottom of a pre-World War II Army target drone that had been sitting behind a house in the dirt for 30 years.
Based on ultralight experience, my guess is that corrosion in the form of rusty bolts is more likely in teardrop trailers than corroded aluminum. Many teardrop chassis designs use steel tubing, which in theory offers the same safe haven for moisture as aluminum tubing on ultralights.
But it's a guess on my part. Has anyone taken apart a teardrop from the 1940s or 1950s and specifically looked for corrosion?
For build pix of Crocodile Tear, completed 10/26/06 -- Look at my album or new website <www.crocodiletear.com> (website has more info)