I have posted about this before. Stainless steel is a misnomer and the assumption that it will not rust is erroneous. So called stainless steel is an amalgamation (alloy) of iron, nickel, and chrome as well as lesser trace elements. Iron atoms on the surface of 304 or 316 (marine grade with higher content of nickel and chrome and slightly less iron by percentage) stainless steel will oxidize (rust). In order to avoid this, the part must be passivated. Passivation is an acid bath of nitric acid, (citric acid in environmentally sensative California) which removes the iron molecules (atoms) on the surface of stainless steel. In the highly competative marine stainless steel boat hardware market, passivation has generraly become a finishing process ignored for marine hardware to avoid additional cost. Attwood, Seadog, Perko and others are distributing parts to boat builders that are not pasivated due to the added cost of passivation or the absence of skill or understanding of the current lowest cost suppliers in China, the Philipines, etc. C-Dory Group must buy smaller than mass produced standard pack quantities as is from domestic suppliers and may not be able to source custom finished passivated parts economically. So... quit your bellyachin, C-Dory is not to blame and other boat builders using standard hardware have the same issues. The unpassivated stainless parts on our boats will discolor a bit when new and will do so less and less as the years go by and you polish your stainless. Red Fox noted on this forum a while back and observed that after years of polishing his stainless in fact, does not rust any more. The iron on the surface that oxidizes and shows as a stain eventually polishes away. Kind of a manual pasivation.