quick question: stainless steel reef safe?

jafoca

New member
I need a better clamp for my skimmer pump than i have now.

All i can find is an "all stainless steel" worm gear clamp.

Is this reef safe?

Thanks
 
the stainless steel clamps are no good for saltwater, stainless stell is just what it means...it stains-less but is still steel. the ring bolt is really bad stainless if they actually are, all mine rust out after 6 months and there just above the sump. i would use PVC glue
 
To say that those clamps don't work well means that you've been using them incorrectly, jaf.
 
stainless less comes in different grades, those clamps are the lowest grade stainless thats produced, they will rust over time wheras if you get medical grade stailess, well lets just say good luck getting it to rust.
 
Stainless Steels constitute a large family of iron-based engineering alloys containing a minimum of 12% Chromium. When you see 18/8, 18/10, 25/20 etc. the first is always Chromium and the second is always Nickel.There are several groups of stainlesses, known by their crystal packing or microstructural arrangement.

These are: (generally)

Austenitic - 300 series = 17 to 20+ Cr, 8 to 20+ Ni = non-magnetic.
Ferritic - usually less Cr and no Ni = magnetic.
Martensitic - 400 series = <18 Cr <5% Ni + Carbon for hardenabilty - magnetic.
Also duplexes and superduplexes = 25%Cr/20%Ni = non-mag, very corrosion resistant.
And also others - have mixed phases for special uses.

Chromium provides oxide film on surface and hence corrosion resistance.

Nickel provides strength mainly.

(not my own writing, copied from somewhere else)
 
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