| Using titanium for top fittings is a very wise choice due to  the amount of corrosion that a less noble metal in this position suffers.  Constant exposure to the elements and a harsh marine environment mean certain  eventual failure for a material such as stainless steel. Titanium, however, remains  corrosion free throughout the lifetime of the vessel and then some.
 Top fittings are hardware pieces that connect a boat’s  dodger or bimini tubing together and to the deck or cockpit, usually by a small  pin or screw hooked to a hinge mounted there. Top fittings primarily consist of  top caps, jaw slides and deck hinges.
 
 The top cap is a tubing end cap that has an elongated flat  protrusion with a hole going through it near the end. Top caps are usually  secured to the tubing by either tightening a set screw through a threaded hole  near the bottom of the cap or by being welded onto the end of the tubing. The  top cap is then attached by a pin or screw to either a jaw slide (attached to  the middle of the tubing) or a deck hinge (mounted to the vessel).
 
 A jaw slide is a fitting that slides onto the tubing and is  secured in place with set screws. They are designed to attach to a top cap by a  pin or screw. The jaw slide is made from a piece of tubing that’s inside diameter  is slightly larger than the outside diameter of the tube it is mounted on. Two  triangular shaped plates with a hole going through them spaced apart slightly  wider than the thickness of the top cap protrusion is the joining mechanism.  Once the hole in the top cap is aligned with the holes in the triangular  plates, a pin or screw is inserted through them and secured, making for a  hinging joint.
 
 Deck hinges, similar to jaw slides, have two triangular  plates with a hole through them for attaching to a top cap with a pin or screw.  Unlike the jaw slide, the two plates are connected to a rectangular flat plate  which is to be mounted to the cockpit or deck. Once a top cap is attached to  the deck hinge, the tubing is able to be angled as necessary to fit the design  of the bimini or dodger.
 
 A chronic problem with stainless steel jaw slides and top  caps is that they rust between the fitting and the tubing, dripping rust all  over the boat, the dodger or bimini fabric and the see through plastic making a  horrible mess. Anyone who wants to keep their boat looking nice must spend  hours of scrubbing to remove this rust. Titanium is corrosion free, so no rust and  no mess.
 
 It is a strange fact that the cost of dealing with rusting  stainless steel on dodgers and biminis more than offsets the additional cost of  a titanium dodger or bimini.
 
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