WRT possible galvanic action I found this reference in a similar thread from the US. With cited sources.
I will inspect my keel anodes next week and report back on any deterioration too.....
This following copy and paste is from the thread:
http://www.eng-tips.com/viewthread.cfm?qid=146280"berkshire,
FYI, I believe your Feb. 4 diagnosis of 'electrolytic corrosion' is basically correct.
However, it's not from stray electrical currents but due to galvanic corrosion between the iron matrix (anodic) and graphite (cathodic). Known as graphitization or graphite corrosion:
?In this case, the iron matrix corrodes, leaving behind a porous graphite mass that can be carved with a pocket knife.? Significant weakening can occur w/o significant dimensional change.
It only occurs in low corrosion situations, e.g., under deteriorated paint. Flowing seawater exposure causes more uniform attack of both iron and graphite (& sometimes pitting).
An eddy-current technique can be used to detect and measure graphitization.
Your paint pretreatment is reasonable given the conditions. If permissible, the best pretreatment would be abrasive blasting plus chromic acid treatment.* Given the porosity, it's probably best that you avoided other acids or hydrowashing. Pretty hard to rinse and dry. Platers generally alternate hot & cold DI water to cleanse the porosity, and powder coaters bake dry before painting.
For future reference (new keels): Graphitic corrosion only occurs in gray cast iron with its graphite flake network. Nodular (ductile) and malleable cast irons don't have the problem. For maximum corrosion resistance in saltwater, consider an alloyed C.I. In 15-year testing in Panama, an 18% Ni C.I. had a weight loss only 1/12 that of gray C.I. at mean tide level and ¼ in continuous immersion (Pacific Ocean). The lowest corrosion rate I found listed for continuous seawater immersion was 0.0008 inch/year for a cast iron of composition 3%C-1.2Mn-1.7Si-6.5Cu-15.0Ni-2.0Cr (wt%) tested 6 years at Kure Beach, North Carolina.
This composition corresponds to ASTM A436 Austenitic Gray Iron Castings, Type 1 and ASTM A439 Austenitic Ductile Iron Castings, Type D-2. Interestingly, some of the test bars in these specifications are called 'keel blocks.'
Iron Castings Handbook, pp. 317-321 (1971) and pp. 492, 497-502 (1981).
?Development of a Cast Iron Graphitization Measurement Device,? NYGAS Technol. Briefs, Issue 99-690-1 (Jan. 1999). [the eddy-current technique]
ASM Handbook, vol. 13 Corrosion p. 566-572 (1987); updated vol. 13Bpp. 43-50 (2005)."
Ian