Superjet with corrosion problem

hi guys I have a 09 sj that I'm having a corrosion and rust problem with its only in drag water never sank and I spray it down with wd40 after I ride. It has very low hrs I just don't understand my last Superjet I beat the poop out of it and rode in the salt and sank it once or twice and never had rust like this. My Ada head looks like poop and it's driving me crazy
 
Bare in mind that WD40 is not a true rust inhibitor or a lubricant. It is only for water displacement hence the name...WD - water displacing - 40. A former coworker was an aviation tech, he said they used WD40 all the time to spray the back of control panels when in high humidity situations or when the planes go from the cooler air at 30,000+ feet and descend to ground level. Condensation would build on electrical parts that saw the cooler air so they would spray them with the WD to clear out the moisture.
 

tntsuperjet

Tntperformance-engineering.com
Location
Georgetown ca
Bare in mind that WD40 is not a true rust inhibitor or a lubricant. It is only for water displacement hence the name...WD - water displacing - 40. A former coworker was an aviation tech, he said they used WD40 all the time to spray the back of control panels when in high humidity situations or when the planes go from the cooler air at 30,000+ feet and descend to ground level. Condensation would build on electrical parts that saw the cooler air so they would spray them with the WD to clear out the moisture.
Wow someone actually knows the true design of WD40.
 

tntsuperjet

Tntperformance-engineering.com
Location
Georgetown ca
The use of a silicone spray and constant washing with soap and water will greatly reduce it.
Without pics here my speculation.
The new boat is a darker color there for heats up more and causes condensation under the hood. The head is poor quality anadise leaving it vulnerable to inner granulated corrosion.
Wash the boat well. Use brad brissle brush to remove the rust from bolt heads, spray motor with sc1, motul shine & Go.
Let the spray dry well in warm air for 20-30 min. Wipe off excess with dry towel. I run a mild steel pipe in salt water using this technique and it keeps rust at bay.
 

OCD Solutions

Original, Clean and Dependable Solutions
Location
Rentz, GA
Do you leave your battery connected when the ski is not in use? Use a battery tender maybe?

This shouldn't be a problem normally but if you have a parasitic drain to a common ground, you can can greatly accelerate corrosion.

Google "Stray current corrosion".

Stray Current Corrosion

Stray current corrosion occurs when metal with an electrical current flowing into it is immersed in water that is grounded (such as in any lake, river, or ocean). The current can leave the metal and flow through the water to ground. This will cause rapid corrosion of the metal at the point where the current leaves. Stray direct current (or battery current) is particularly destructive. Stray current corrosion can cause rapid deterioration of the metal. If the metal in question happens to be an aluminum part like your drive unit, it can be destroyed in a matter of days.

Stray current corrosion is different from galvanic corrosion in that galvanic corrosion is caused by connections between dissimilar metals of your boat’s drive components, and utilizes the electrical potential of those dissimilar metals. Electrons flow from one dissimilar metal (the anode) to another dissimilar metal (the cathode). In stray current corrosion, electricity from an outside source flows into your boat's metal components and out through the water for a ground.

For example, your boat may be sitting between a boat leaking DC current and the best ground for that current. Rather than the DC current moving through the water to ground, your boat could provide a path of lower resistance. The DC current could enter a throughhull fitting, travel through the bonding system, and leave via your drive to the ground. Remember that corrosion occurs at the locations where DC current leaves metal and enters water.

Stray current can come from an outside source either internal or external to your boat. Internal sources involve a short in your boat’s wiring system, such as a poorly insulated wire in the bilge, an electrical accessory that may be improperly wired, or a wire with a weak or broken insulation that is intermittently wet.

External sources are almost always related to shore power connections. A boat with internal stray current problems can cause accelerated corrosion to other boats plugged into the same shorepower line if they provide better ground. The stray current would be transmitted to other boats through the common ground wire, but can and should be blocked by installing a galvanic isolator.

A much more subtle, but potentially more damaging cause of stray current corrosion can occur without any electrical problems. Supposed you cruise back to your marina after a weekend on the water, and plug into shorepower to recharge batteries using your automatic trickle charger. Then you go to work for the week. On Monday, a large steel hulled boat (with scratched and scraped paint) ties up next to your boat. This boat is also plugged into shorepower and goes visiting onshore for a few days. A battery has just been formed—the large steel hull and your small aluminum drive connected by the shorepower and ground wire. Depending on the proximity, relative sizes, and how long your neighbor is ashore, when you go out the next weekend you may find your drive highly deteriorated. This unfortunate scenario can also be prevented by the installation of a galvanic isolator.
 

OCD Solutions

Original, Clean and Dependable Solutions
Location
Rentz, GA
Had it happen on my 07 Surf build. Ski looked 6 years old after 6 months and required a complete tear down to bring it back to OCD condition. I had a battery cable rubbed through in behind my ebox.
 
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