winterize groco seacock for active drain
nice idea, thanks. yeah i will wait for the groco guys to get back to
me (email support?) and see what's what. i figure i have a few weeks
before things really freeze up.
thanks again,
-CB
MMC wrote:
What about taking the hose off the seacock, putting a reducer (1 1/2" to 1")
on the end of that (maybe a shorter hose) hose and then a 1" hose to run
thru the open seacock to outside the hull?
The seacocks should stay dry...
If it sounds like I'm babbling and don't know what I'm talking about, it's
because I don't! It's in the 80's here on Florida's Space Coast.
MMC
"CB" wrote in message
oups.com...
ok so last spring I installed some nice bronze groco seacocks as
valves for my forward draining cockpit - the drains go down through
thru-hulls under the waterline.
i'm about to haul the boat for the winter, and yes, it will freeze.
so. groco recommends that i drain the body of the seacock by removing
the side plugs, etc etc. no problem.
but. these are cockpit drains, and the cockpit drains forward (ranger
26, 1971). the drains need to be active over the winter (example: i get
snow in the cockpit, whatever, my tarp fails), and then it warms up one
day. cockpit needs to drain down and out, or i flood the interior (only
about six inches before i overflow into the cabin).
so. I can drain the seacocks, but then i need to replug them so the
drains function "normally" over the winter, should there be a need.
but. water will get into the body and if it refreezes then i'm in
trouble.
does anyone have any comments or treatment suggestions on how i can
win on both sides here?
thanks,
-CB
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