Sinking at the dock from shaft seal problem
They sealed the cutlass bearing/shaft and the raw water line input.
"Dick Locke" wrote in message
...
On Tue, 24 Oct 2006 23:52:09 GMT, "Cap'n Ric"
wrote:
When I was in Castine, Maine this summer a 51' Hinckley Sou'wester came
into
Eaton's Boatyard dock about 4" lower in the water than when they started
at
Southwest Harbor. My first question to the owner was "Do you have a shaft
seal or a stuffing box?" He had a shaft seal. When we pulled the cover
off
the engine and transmission you could see the tear in the boot and the
water
coming in. The folks at Eaton stopped the leak and The Maine Maritime
Acadamy hauled him the next morning. Hinckley sent a guy over from
Southwest Harbor to replace the seal.
I have a 2003 Beneteau 473 and unfortuneately I also have a shaft seal.
However, I religiously burp it if I think it is possible that air got in
it.
I also grease it every 100 engine hours. I have a max-prop so my shaft
doesn't turn under sail.
Regards,
Cap'n Ric
I'm glad I don't have one.. The rip is really scary. You can fix the
seal that slides forward if you catch it early but there's no stopping
a ripped seal...I thought. How did Eaton do it?
Good idea from someone else about a siren and light. I wonder why very
few people do that....
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