| The common use of titanium in everyday hardware products is  now becoming a less unusual and very welcome sight. Whether you have nearly  lost the mast on your sailboat due to corroded clevis pins holding the rigging  up or you spent entirely too much time removing a rusty bolt from a rusty  bracket with a rusty wrench, you know the time has come for change.
 
 With its unparalleled corrosion resistance, titanium is the  ideal material for all manner of hardware items. Titanium pipe for power plants  is a one example. The reason titanium is an overall better tubing option than  some materials is due to its immunity to corrosion. It is impervious to  corrosion in saline and brackish environments and since titanium produces a  naturally occurring oxide film, it resist breakdown from chloride ions as well.  Titanium condenser tube plugs have in fact been in use in some power plants for  40 years consecutively without re-tubing. The Arthur Kill Station in New York  has been operating with titanium condenser tube plugs since 1971. Using a lower  cost material can cost less initially, however, the cost can be significantly more  overall due to tube failure from corrosion, erosion and bio-fouling.
 
 Titanium’s combination of high strength plus its corrosion  resistance make it able to withstand the test of time. So, next time you wipe  the blood from your knuckles after trying to remove that rusty bolt from that  rusty bracket with that rusty wrench, consider the superior alternative that  will save you time and money.
   |  |