Atmospheric exposure of plated specimens in six locations showed that in a rural or purely marine climate, both zinc and cadmium coatings furnished better protection against the corrosion of steel than did nickel or chromium coatings of the same thickness, although the zinc and cadmium rapidly lost their luster. In an industrial atmosphere, where sulphurous and sulphuric acids are present, both zinc and cadmium were attacked rather rapidly, and the life was about proportional to the thickness . Under these conditions the cadmium coatings failed in about two-thirds of the time required for failure of zinc coatings of the same thickness. Zinc-cadmium alloys containing about 10 percent of cadmium were superior to either zinc or cadmium. Variations in the conditions selected for depositing the coatings did not have a marked effect on their protective value. Hot-dipped zinc coatings gave about the same protection as plated zinc coatings of the same thickness.In accelerated t ests, Buch as the salt spray or intermittent immersion in a solution of sodium chloride, the time required for failure of a zinc coating is about proportional to its thickness. Cadmium coatings last much longer than those of zinc in a salt spray, which is not, therefore, a true measure of their relative value in an industrial atmosphere.The protective value of a zinc or cadmium coating depends principally upon its minimum thickness, which can be determined by dropping tests, microscopic measurements, and the chord method.