MC1 anodes

ratdude747

Petty Officer 1st Class
Joined
Sep 30, 2023
Messages
301
I assume we're talking about the trim fin that also doubles as the anode.

Anything that fits an Alpha (IIRC MC-1 is the same, as I'm pretty sure I the anode I installed on my MC1 is in fact an "Alpha" marketed unit).

Otherwise, it depends on your application. What prop? Fresh or salt water? The former determines if you need a "high-performance" Anode (extra prop clearance, what I installed when I swapped to a Piranha)... the latter determines what metal is needed. Lots of OEM and aftermarket options...
 

hairchef

Cadet
Joined
Jun 30, 2012
Messages
9
I assume we're talking about the trim fin that also doubles as the anode.

Anything that fits an Alpha (IIRC MC-1 is the same, as I'm pretty sure I the anode I installed on my MC1 is in fact an "Alpha" marketed unit).

Otherwise, it depends on your application. What prop? Fresh or salt water? The former determines if you need a "high-performance" Anode (extra prop clearance, what I installed when I swapped to a Piranha)... the latter determines what metal is needed. Lots of OEM and aftermarket options...
I need that for sure and the 2 little knob ones on bell housing is all I see
 

1960 Starflite

Petty Officer 1st Class
Joined
Jun 23, 2011
Messages
386
Aluminum anodes didn't work at all for me in our sorta fresh water lake. Magnesium works very well. No more pitting on lower unit.
 

ratdude747

Petty Officer 1st Class
Joined
Sep 30, 2023
Messages
301
Aluminum anodes didn't work at all for me in our sorta fresh water lake. Magnesium works very well. No more pitting on lower unit.
Considering the casing is made from aluminum, no wonder. You need a metal that is more reactive than the aluminum case for it to work... or at least less-passivating than the aluminum.

Magnesium works because it is way more reactive than aluminum (anything higher on the list is the sort of thing that will fizz & go boom in water). Zinc technically isn't as reactive as aluminum, but passivation effects makes zinc work (as unlike aluminum and stainless steel, it doesn't passivate). This is why zinc is preferred for salt water... it works well enough to protect things without working so well that it burns out too fast.
 

Scott06

Admiral
Joined
Apr 20, 2014
Messages
6,767
Aluminum anodes didn't work at all for me in our sorta fresh water lake. Magnesium works very well. No more pitting on lower unit.
What prop are you running. I had zero issues with aluminum annodes in fresh when I ran aluminum props. went to a big 4 blade revolution 4 and had some pitting like u mention. This is lift kept not in a marina not connected to shore power.

also found better results with oem merc magnesium vs the magnesium i got from boatzincs. much less corrosion with oem ones and they erode more .
 

1960 Starflite

Petty Officer 1st Class
Joined
Jun 23, 2011
Messages
386
What prop are you running. I had zero issues with aluminum annodes in fresh when I ran aluminum props. went to a big 4 blade revolution 4 and had some pitting like u mention. This is lift kept not in a marina not connected to shore power.

also found better results with oem merc magnesium vs the magnesium i got from boatzincs. much less corrosion with oem ones and they erode more .
3 blade aluminum on pontoon and 4 blade on Mercruiser. Boats sit in water May to October, no electric at mine or surrounding docks. Our lake is run-off feed. I considered it a 7 mile long pond.
 
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