I don't think that is mud. That is what a steel fitting looks like when screwed to a Stainless or brass pump or check valve. Electrolysis happens when two dissimilar metals are screwed together. They usually don't look that bad because they spring a hole in the side before it looks like mud.
Well, if that is the case, it should not happen any more, as the new pump has a cheaper plastic top coupling. The old fitting that screws into it looked to still be in good condition, so we just rescrewed it into the plastic. I guess ill see if it holds up.
More often than anyone likes to admit plastic plumbing. pipes and connectors/fixtures. have a significant advantage with regard to service life--they don't like high vibration and stress but properly supported and isolated they often outlive traditional metallic systems--they are also VERY corrosion resistant. Our house is 25+ years old, plumbed exclusively with PVC and CPVC, piping problems are the very least of my concerns...
I like Brass or SS, but plastic is better than iron on a pump. However, I have installed thousands of steel fittings screwed into brass or SS fittings. If you wrap the outside with electric tape it insulates the negative particles from the positive ones and the steel fittings will still look like new 30 years from now when you take off the tape.
I like Brass or SS, but plastic is better than iron on a pump. However, I have installed thousands of steel fittings screwed into brass or SS fittings. If you wrap the outside with electric tape it insulates the negative particles from the positive ones and the steel fittings will still look like new 30 years from now when you take off the tape.