Tantalium sounds like the next best thing to platinium but its still very expensive...If i cant get a decent coating of lead dioxide on these graphite rods i have ill try tantalium wire...if you read the Patents it makes a very good substrate for lead dioxide coating..
Tantalum isn't nearly as expensive as platinum. Usually, its a good bit cheaper than silver, though the price runs up and down due to demand for capacitors. It is hard to find as metal though, because there really isn't much use for it outside the chemical/electronics industries.
Tantalum foil capacitors sound like a pretty good bet, though I'd be careful of any tantalum cap when breaking the seal. Some are filled with sulfuric acid. The oxidized anode type of tantalum cap often has a sintered anode made of essentially compressed powder. I doubt that has enough strength to be reworked. Solid tantalum is supposed to be very hard, but actually work like copper.
Ebay usually has samples of tantalum available, though the industrial surplus listings are a lot cheaper than the element collector listings. Sometimes the surplus listings are priced way under the actual metal value of what they are selling.
All that information, and I can't find anything about erosion of tantalum in a chlorate or perchlorate cell.