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Petzl stop life

D

diggerdog adam

Guest
Sam, i think it depends on the qualitie of the stainless as there are two general types Magnetic, and Non magnetic,

But hey i might be wrong on that one your testing the old grey matter now :rolleyes:
 

SamT

Moderator
having a quick scout on google - its an alloy with about 10% chromium in and sometimes nickel too.

400 Series Martensitic - Typical grade: 410
Straight chromium (12-18%), magnetic and can be hardened by heat treatment. Typical use: Fasteners, pump shafts

400 Series Ferritic - Typical grade: 430
Straight chromium (12-18%), "low" carbon, magnetic, but not heat treatable. Typical use: Appliance trim, cooking utensils

200/300 Series Austenitic - Typical grade: 304
Chromium (17-25%)/Nickel (8-25%), non-magnetic, not heat treatable. Can develop high strength by cold work. Additions of molybdenum (up to 7%) can increase the corrosion resistance. Typical use: Food equipment, chemical equipment, architectural applications

Precipitation Hardening - Typical grade: 17-4
Chromium (12-28%)/Nickel (3-9%), martensitic or austenitic. Develop strength by precipitation hardening reaction during heat treatment. Typical use: Valves, gears, petro-chemical equipment

Duplex - Typical grade: 2205
Chromium (18-25%)/Nickel (4-7%) and up to 4% molybdenum. More resistant to stress corrosion cracking than austenitic, yet tougher than fully ferritic alloys. Typical use: Pipelines, pressure vessels, shafting


(cut and paste from the very interesting 'stainless steel information center')

it seems its the chromium that forms an oxide on the surface that prevents corrosion - and presumably prevents preferential corrosion with aluminium krabs since they are not actually in contact.

So there you go (I must get out more :oops: )
 

Mark

Well-known member
SamT said:
If you 'work' with your stop (high access - tution - rescue) then it might be worth replacing them after a set time as a matter of course.

Old knackered stops are brilliant when your rope is covered in mastic or concrete, or is about 20mm thick due to mud, (you cant move when using a new one) obviously backed up with a shunt
 
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