Guard Your Tackle with Corrosion-Fighting Products
Guard Your Tackle with
Corrosion-Fighting Products .
APHILOSOPHICAL
friend of mine sums
up the inevitable
physical effects of
growing older by saying, “It’s not
the years that get you; it’s the mileage!”
Some people try to turn back the odometer with cosmetic surgery, while
others fight the signs of advanced years with wrinkle-reducing, antiaging
creams. You can take a similar approach with fishing tackle.
Preserve and
Protect
Time in the saltwater environment
takes its toll on reels, causing them to
show age by way of corroded surfaces
and lackluster looks. You may wait until
things get really ugly, then resort to drastic measures such as replacement surgery
(for example, switching old side plates for
new). Or you can treat your tackle with
TLC that includes regular applications of
potions that protect against corrosion and
preserve that clean, youthful glow.
“Corrosion occurs as metal tries to
return to its natural state, which is metal
oxide,” says Mike Tuite, president of
Corrosion Technologies (maker of
CorrosionX). All metals corrode over
time, as evidenced by small pits that
develop on an aluminum reel spool or
the chalky coating that forms on lead
sinkers. While simple contact with air
allows oxidation, or corrosion, to begin
gnawing on your favorite lever drag,
other factors can worsen the situation.
“Any kind of moisture speeds up the
process, but salt water is probably the
fastest accelerant,” Tuite says.
SEAL THE STEEL
Since contact with air and water promotes oxidation, anticorrosion products
slow the process by putting a barrier
between metal and its surroundings.
Anglers must be careful, however,
because products designed for waterproofing — not corrosion protection —
may do more harm than good if they contain silicone or wax. These sealants keep
water out, but by the same token they can
trap moisture against the metal. Unable to
escape, moisture can actually encourage
corrosion beneath the blanket of sealant.
Many people believe the oil in products such as CorrosionX, The Inhibitor and
Corrosion Block does all the work. Not so:
All these compounds rely on a petroleum
base as the vehicle to deliver a payload of
corrosion-inhibiting substances, and a
one-size-fits-all attitude does not apply
here. Each type of metal suffers the effects
of corrosion in its own individual way.
“Our formula contains about a dozen
active ingredients, some specifically
designed for certain metals. For instance,
we include a corrosion inhibitor for steel,
another for aluminum, a different one for
brass and so on,” says Tuite.
CorrosionX employs “fluid thin film
coating technology” to displace moisture
while covering metal with an ultrathin
protective layer. Because the molecules in
CorrosionX and metal have positive and
negative poles, the substances seek out
and adhere to each other. “We call it ‘polar
bonding,’” Tuite says. “Since the molecules are attracted to metal, CorrosionX
seeps and creeps into spots you may not
reach by spraying or wiping.”
Manufacturers recommend thoroughly
cleaning equipment and allowing it to dry
before applying anticorrosion treatments.
Some anglers go as far as disassembling
reels to dunk side plates and other parts in
a bath of corrosion inhibitor, though this
may not always be necessary. “Once you
make that initial coating, salt and other dirt
should wipe right off a reel. I suggest rinsing reels after each trip, but you need only
apply CorrosionX after every other trip. It
doesn’t wash off easily in water, but you
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