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I know that stainless steel bolts are used exclusively in Yamaha motors and bolt directly into aluminum castings such as cylinders, cases, etc... and apparently there is no concern about galvanic corrosion. So when it comes to the pump section (I'm working with a 155 at the moment), why are the 7" long pump bolts made of aluminum? I suspect it has to do with the pump being exposed to water and potentially salt with higher levels of frequency.
So my real question is... if I wanted to tap the front wear ring holes where the bolt typically goes through and then threads into that big pump tunnel (I'm speaking of how 155s bolt up on coaches) and thread a large 7" long 3/8" diameter stainless steal bolt into the freshly tapped holes, would I experience galvanic corrosion problems (BTW, I'm almost 100% fresh water). Or for that matter, are there any other unforeseen problems I might experience?
So my real question is... if I wanted to tap the front wear ring holes where the bolt typically goes through and then threads into that big pump tunnel (I'm speaking of how 155s bolt up on coaches) and thread a large 7" long 3/8" diameter stainless steal bolt into the freshly tapped holes, would I experience galvanic corrosion problems (BTW, I'm almost 100% fresh water). Or for that matter, are there any other unforeseen problems I might experience?
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