Abeo
Well-known member
All this talk about water, rust and obssesive compulsive draining. Doesn't oxygen come into play here. Since the walls are wet and exposed to O2 wouldn't they be more prone to rust than the bottom that's holding water and exposed to less oxygen?
Corrosion requires 4 things:
Oxygen
Electrolyte (water in this case, which transports the electrons)
Cathode (part that oxidizes/corrodes, which requires electrons)
Anode (part that supplies the electrons for the corrosion)
We can't change the oxygen levels (obviously). The cathodes and anodes are within the steel, where the local chemistry is different than another area (pits happen because one area is more cathodic than the surrounding area). So with those three not easily controlled, we can control the level of electrolyte by draining off water often. Having standing water in the bottom won't help, as water will absorb oxygen (especially under pressure).
Internal coating, air dryers, etc would help... but there is a cost-benefit scenario to be considered.
