gimmeagig
Member
Hi guys,
I posted earlier about trying to protect my waste tank in my aging CDS from any more leaks. I heard that if I put a block of zinc into the tank and run a grounding wire to it it would act as a sacrificial anode and the chemicals would eat away at the block of zinc instead of my tank bottom.
Someone else said that zinc is the wrong material because it will only work in salt water.
I don't have a lot of money and I would hate to have to replace the tank. So I decided to give it a try anyway and bought an anode sesigned for boats at a marine supply place. I ran a wire to it and drilled a hole in a inside panel in my tank to ground it. It has been in there now for about 4 months and I just pulled out the anode to see if there is any change.
Here are the pictures:
This one was the dirty anode.As you can see there is some type of slime on there
Here's another shot of it.
This is the anode after I cleaned it off. As you can see there is a deterioration. So it seems to be working.
This is the bottom of my tank where the anode used to be.There is this yellowish epoxy like stuff that stuck to the area around where the anode was located. I am not a chemist and I'm wondering if anybody here can tell me what that might be and if it is indeed working.
It really does seem to be doing something I just don't know what exactly it is that it is doing and what the byproducts of this chemical reaction are.I'm not sure if it is eating the anode instead of my tank (I sure hope so)or if my tank is still in jeopardy. I'm also wondering if there are any tabs that I could drop into the tank to protect it.
So for all the scientifically incline people here.
What do you think about this?
I posted earlier about trying to protect my waste tank in my aging CDS from any more leaks. I heard that if I put a block of zinc into the tank and run a grounding wire to it it would act as a sacrificial anode and the chemicals would eat away at the block of zinc instead of my tank bottom.
Someone else said that zinc is the wrong material because it will only work in salt water.
I don't have a lot of money and I would hate to have to replace the tank. So I decided to give it a try anyway and bought an anode sesigned for boats at a marine supply place. I ran a wire to it and drilled a hole in a inside panel in my tank to ground it. It has been in there now for about 4 months and I just pulled out the anode to see if there is any change.
Here are the pictures:
This one was the dirty anode.As you can see there is some type of slime on there
Here's another shot of it.
This is the anode after I cleaned it off. As you can see there is a deterioration. So it seems to be working.
This is the bottom of my tank where the anode used to be.There is this yellowish epoxy like stuff that stuck to the area around where the anode was located. I am not a chemist and I'm wondering if anybody here can tell me what that might be and if it is indeed working.
It really does seem to be doing something I just don't know what exactly it is that it is doing and what the byproducts of this chemical reaction are.I'm not sure if it is eating the anode instead of my tank (I sure hope so)or if my tank is still in jeopardy. I'm also wondering if there are any tabs that I could drop into the tank to protect it.
So for all the scientifically incline people here.
What do you think about this?