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Whole lotta shakin' goin' on...
Any boat, if it's been modified greatly, and/or if it's sat up for any significant period of time, has many potentials for unhappy mischief once it goes back in the water, either due to changes made or aging components. Since Flying Pig had been on jackstands for just shy of 2 years, and the amount of changes we'd wrought were stupendous, but not of the usual interest-points to the readers here, we've not said a great deal about what's been going on. However, you can see, by clicking the gallery link below, and then the 2011-2012 Refit subgallery, what we've been up to. Plenty of places for trouble to brew! As a result, a prudent mariner will conduct what is known as a "shakedown cruise" - activity back on the water where, in some cases, problems occur which can't be seen or anticipated before the boat's in the water. "Shakedowns" are designed to allow failures to happen more conveniently, by cruising coastally, staying close to supplies and towing, should we need it. So, before we left, I renewed my TowBoatUS subscription, (lapsed when we first left the US), for unlimited towing. Surprisingly, they apparently knew I'd be back, as the renewal was in the same membership number as my original. Then, when we splashed on Saturday, January 26th, on a lunar high tide (so that we'd have all the possible advantages of depth as we exited the marina), we stayed in the launch slip to assess all the places which let in, or kept out, water from the outside of the boat. We also wanted to see how our engine did in the water. All the testing we'd done so far had been done with the raw water pump disabled (by taking off the fan belt) so as to not burn up the impeller from not having any water. So, we cranked the engine. Vroooom! Look out the back - do we have any water? Yes, a torrent, where before we had splatters. Apparently my having done the work on the heat exchanger, removing small particles of prior impeller from the front, and ramming clear the many tubes through which the raw (sea) water ran, was to very good effect. So, water got to the pump, water went through the pump, and, to our surprise, as we'd felt in the times we ran it to get it warm before my oil change, the engine sounded much quieter than we'd recalled. Perhaps all the changes we'd made in our alignment woes (driveshaft subgallery) made a difference as to how everything fit. So, satisfied that our engine would run and stay cool, and including that our new thermometer/temperature gauge was working properly, we shut down. Our next two items to check were our new rudder and shaft packing glands. In the case of the rudder, it wasn't really a new gland, but the shaft was very different than it had been, and we were anxious to see if we could make it behave as new. Much tightening of the shaft as Lydia spun the wheel from lock to lock finally got our water ingress to a bare seep. We'd have to revisit that as we went along, as it was brand new and not yet seated/mated to the shaft, but all looked well. In the case of the drive shaft, as we couldn't run it in the slip, we couldn't really tell how tight to make it. The normal gland should not drip at rest, but allow a few drops a minute to come through as lubrication and cooling when under way. That, too, therefore, would have to be revisited as we went along. However, for now, all looked well. All of our through-hull fixtures worked as they were supposed to, so the water stayed outside the boat unless we asked it to come in (salt water washdown pump, motor cooling water), or out (drains of the sinks and toilets), we were happy to see. Satisfied that we wouldn't sink to the extremely nearby bottom of the slip we went to bed and luxuriated in the slight motion caused by boats passing in the channel, sleeping soundly. Sunday we slept in, but got up expecting to have Lydia's mother and the man whose house she's living in slightly north of here, in Vero Beach, here for lunch. They'd not had a chance to see Flying Pig since we started work, and so were anxious to come aboard. Lydia's mother had cruised with us in the past, so she in particular was anxious to see how we'd done. I'd promised them hamburgers over our new grill. So, I went out early to see how our new (replacing the rusting out prior trusty barbeque) grill would do. It won't light. Dang. I get out a screwdriver and try the trick the manufacturer had suggested when she had sent us a replacement regulator. No such luck. There were a variety of things I could try, later, but without the proof that I could cook hamburgers for them, I wasn't going to commit. Fortunately, Mark and Lydia's mom were ecstatic with the thought of pizza from the local parlor that wins all the awards in Ft. Pierce, A Touch of Brooklyn. It arrived in due course, and a great time was had by all, with some pizza left over, even, for Lydia and my lunch on our first day out. We said our goodbyes and settled in for the night. But "tomorrow" was another day... As we went to start our engine on Monday morning. we were dismayed to hear only a sluggish RRRRRRRRR. No go. Yikes. The slip needs to be emptied, and we can't start the engine! I quickly went into the engine room and did a load test on the start battery. Marginal. Not "failed" but also not "full" - so we elected to replace it. After 4 years, it's possible it was toast, anyway. Fortunately, just as we'd been doing all that, one of our yard friends walked up and offered us the use of his truck, and we hustled off down the street to get another. The battery place sez we've been fortunate to get this much time from the battery, as the typical life is about 3 years. Ah, well - In she goes, and up she fires. No problem, once the engine turns fast enough to develop the compression on which diesel engines ignite their fuel! To our annoyance, we had a honking wind outside, which would make maneuvering our 50' of overhangs, front and rear, in a very confined channel, "interesting." However, the yard had a couple of their guys take lines from us so that we were aimed down the channel rather than straight across, with our bow being blown into the other boats. Using our engine to ease their way, we quickly were in position to exit. Out we go, to no ill effect and with sufficient water under us in the channel that we make the Intra-Coastal Waterway in short order. Our first dragon is slain, having conquered us on the way in to the tune of three groundings, one of which required me to jump in the dinghy and pull over the mast! Once there, we turn right, south, to go for fuel, and then to an anchorage. Much to our amazement, we're just flying along, making over 8 knots through the water. NEVER in our time of ownership has our home moved that fast under power. All that backbreaking labor we'd invested to make the bottom of the boat perfectly smooth, the feathering propellor rebuilt and perfectly balanced and the alignment of the shaft in its new packing gland paid off big time. The lift bridge asked us to hang back a bit so the other two sailboats which were approaching could catch up with us. Accordingly, we slowed to a crawl against the still incoming tide, and, in due course, both the boats to our rear caught up, and, as we got close, the bridge opened. Down went the throttle again, and we hustled downstream. Immediately south of the bridge, at, now, full high tide, we called HarborView marina, for water, diesel fuel, and gasoline for our outboards and also our portable Honda 2000i generator. Honda 2000i "suitcase" generators have become a near-fixture among cruisers due to their economical operation and quiet running, AND their easily being able to keep up with any excess charging needed over and above our solar panels and wind generator. Given that, somehow, we'd managed to have very flat batteries in the slip overnight, we were also very concerned about our house batteries when our engine wouldn't start. Our house batteries (that's what provides all the 12VDC power in our home, as well as, through inverters, any AC power we may need) are seriously major batteries. They weigh in at 125# each and are only 6V, which means that you need 2 of them to get 12V. We have 4, and to replace them would be well over a boat buck (BOAT - Break Out Another Thousand). We elected to see how they did in real life use. So, whether to constantly charge them, or merely use the Honda occasionally when wind and sun weren't sufficient to keep up with us, we needed gasoline as well as diesel fuel. In addition, the water in the yard where we did all our work was foul - not for drinking - and our tanks had not been used in all that time we'd been living in the yard. Accordingly, I took a piece of the rigid plastic tubing we have for our plumbing aboard and connected it to a shop vacuum. Using a penlight and squinting, I cleaned out as much as I could of the sand which ALWAYS accumulates in the bottom of the tanks, as well as various growths which had occurred in those two years. Once done, we filled both tanks with the yard's water, shocking both of our tanks with excess chlorine. After running water through all of our plumbing, including the hot water heater, to get that highly chlorinated water into all the lines and fixtures, we let it sit overnight. Once we were in the water, we emptied the larger tank and, as we filled that larger tank at the fuel dock, we'd empty the smaller one, refilling it after the main tank was full. The marina had suggested that we'd only make it at full high tide, but as that was what we had, we weren't TOO concerned (going aground is chancy at full tide, as one may not get off easily due to the tide falling immediately afterward!). I brought Flying Pig alongside, with her nose closest, so that Lydia could hand off the bow line to the waiting attendant. Then, alternating forward and reverse, taking advantage of the "prop walk" (the direction the stern wants to move when in reverse due to the rotation of the propellor) and forward steering against that, I sidled her up to the dock. So far, so good! The engine started, we made LOTS of way to get here, and reverse works just fine. Maybe this shakedown thing won't be of any event, after all. Once fully loaded, and with a presumed greater depth due to the approximately 3000# we added, we piroetted off the dock and headed back out. Once again, we found our way without touching bottom, despite the admonitions that we'd need full high tide to accomplish the transit, given our depth. In short order, we again reached the Intra-Coastal Waterway, passing the inlet we'd come through nearly 2 years ago, on the way to our first anchorage. By the time we were approaching the fixed bridge (one south of the lift bridge), we had the current with us, having passed the inlet, and we were nearly at full high tide. Some of the work we've done has been at the top of the mast, and with the water all the way up, we held our breath as we slid under the bridge with none of all that stuff we'd hung up there touching the bridge. From 60' below, looking straight up, it's VERY difficult to gauge whether that whip antenna sticking 30" up from the top of the mast will miss the bridge! More exciting would have been the hard antenna for our Wi-Fi system, a few inches shorter. When we leave the states and its bridges, we'll mount a new antenna which is even more powerful, but which would extend to a height likely to touch in US bridges. So, that experiment will have to wait. Crossing the Intra-Coastal Waterway, we tucked into the lagoon south of Causeway Island, the connector which forms the southern boundary of the channel out to the open ocean. That showed on the charts as having lots of depth available (with a 7' draft, we're cautious about where we anchor compared to other boats with shorter distances from the waterline!). Another excitement for us; we'd redone our anchor system, and bought a new anchor; neither had been used in the water. Our previous primary anchor, a Delta 55#, one size larger than that recommended for our boat, became our secondary anchor. Our new anchor, a 73# Rocna, is two sizes larger than recommended. Until we'd bought it, we hadn't seen Rocna's advice against "oversizing" anchors, as the performance of this 3rd generation anchor was so superior to the second generation anchors that oversizing wasn't needed. None the less, we LOVE the idea that we can set it and forget it; I'm not sure that a hurricane would cause us to drag in anything other than a hard-pan bottom (where no anchor can get a grip). As folks say in the cruising world, when pressed as to why so much armament up front, "I like to sleep at night!" So, my first time down was an experience. In about 15' of water, down she went. As is my practice, I let the bow fall away on the wind (or tide, in cases, where there wasn't much wind) so that the chain would not pile onto the end of the anchor. Using our newly reinforced windlass to run out the chain, I stopped momentarily at about 25' - WAAY too short for anchoring, but fine for starting the bite of the anchor. Yank! the nose came around. It was set. I let out 10' increments of chain in rushes, so that we continued to tug on the anchor with some force as each slack was taken up with our backward motion. With 5' off the water, and 15' beneath the waterline, we had an effective depth of 20' - so I let out 150' in total, the last 50 feet in a rush, and attached the 30' snubber. With lots of slack available, Lydia backed down, hard. The slack was taken up, the chain got bar tight, and the snubber, 1" MegaBraid (12 strand nylon rope designed to stretch) stretched mightily. When Lydia got off the throttle in reverse, Flying Pig leaped forward, all 44,000# of her, as the snubber line pulled back. "We're Hooked!" I shouted, and we shut down. So, there we were, at anchor for the first time in nearly 2 years. What a feeling it was to be rocked to sleep, again, with the soft whoosh of the KISS wind generator above us, and the stars shining down through the window we'd installed in our hatch over the bed. Ahhhhh. So, once settled in for a bit, we'd have to wait for an appropriate weather window to head south. But first, let's have another tour around the boat to see about our through-hulls and everything else which connects to the outside watery world. Yikes. The engine pan (the fiberglass pan under the engine, above the bilge, designed to catch any oil which might escape from the engine, before it went into the bilge) had LOTS of water in it, and there was a steady drip from the hose under the raw water pump (the thing which pumps sea water through the heat exchanger to cool the diesel, much the same effect as a radiator on a car or truck). I'll spare you the agony, other than to say that we went through everything, including replacing the hose, to make that quit, including several times taking the pump off the engine. No such luck. It STILL leaks. More of the same protection from stultification from an overdose of information, I won't tell you of all that we went through to resolve it, other than than it involved waiting a week for parts from eBay and a pump vendor to be sent to City Marina, which was across the way, after having been rudely rebuffed from the private marina which shall remain nameless, but is the only one in the middle of Causeway Island in Ft. Pierce. A week later, we had all that in hand, the several pumps I had rebuilt, and the new one mounted. Success. No water from the outside of the pump! Immediately afterward, I cleaned up the pads I'd so lovingly layered on the engine pan (so that even the smallest drop of oil or coolant wouldn't mar the clean engine pan) and replaced them with new. But wait, there's more! The forward head ("bathroom" to most people) Y-valve (the thing which allows you to direct your sewage either to a holding tank or directly overboard) leaked. Again, saving you the gory details, a replacement failed, an attempt at cannibalizing the OTHER two spares I had failed, all due to breakage, and I gave up and ordered, again to come to City Marina, a new-generation Y-valve. Like everything on a boat, it was shockingly expensive for what you got, but the much bigger detail was that it wasn't the same size as what we took off. I'd been putting off doing this for years, accumulating more spares of an obsolete design, because the new ones available were either equilateral triangle type, which would have a totally misaligned orientation to fit into the current plumbing, or much larger than the "football goal posts" design we had before. Therefore, some major alterations to the plumbing system might have to occur in order to make this new one work. In addition, because of the old hose we'd been using causing, due to stiffness, our prior breakage issues, I ordered the only length of new hose available, and which could arrive in less than a week for a shipping charge which was only painful rather than excruciating - 12.5 feet - which would absolutely, positively, not ever have a "head smell" to it. A 20 year history with the product assured me I could depend on it... Sure enough, both arrived in due course, while we sat and stewed. Without the raw water pump, we couldn't run the engine, and without a working Y-valve, we couldn't be legal in inland waters, where discharge of untreated sewage is not allowed. Much temporary measuring, fitting, removal and replacement convinced me that not only would I not have to do any surgery on the existing plumbing, we'd be able to get away with only a 4" chunk of that 1/4 roll (a roll is 50') of sanitary hose. The actual fitting involved lots of contortion and grunting, along with repositioning a standoff for the PVC pipe with which, during our initial refit after purchase, I'd replaced all the stinky hose which came with the forward head, along with a shortening of the hose leading to the holding tank (that place you put the untreated sewage until having it pumped out), but in the end, worked just fine. Phew!!! So, here we still are in the same place, nearly two weeks into our "shakedown cruise," and we've scarcely moved since we went in the water. Our time at anchor was a forced wait, and offered us an opportunity to use the new grill which we'd bought to replace our rusting previous trusty dinner-maker and fish-griller. I turned my attention to the task of getting it to work, digging up the old address I'd had for the grill manufacturer, and wrote off to see what should be done. Fortunately, we not only were receiving our packages and mail at City Marina, we were also their guests on their WiFi system. All of the parts-ordering had been done, easily, at anchor. So, email was easy, too. Luckily, I'd been in correspondence with the grill maker when we first got it, again because of a regulator (the thing which controls the gas to the grill) issue. Again, shortening the story, because they'd been having difficulty with the type I had, another, different model, regulator was sent. As is becoming common, now, nothing's simple, and I'll spare you the details, but a complete disassembly later, and the receipt of a file from the company displaying tricks of the trade which could increase our gas flow, eventually worked such that we now have heat. Unfortunately, we now also have wind, and it's strong enough that we can't cook on the grill. Fortunately, Lydia does a great job with the fresh vegetables we'd brought aboard, and we have yet to miss a meal! However, on the first reasonably calm day, we'll christen the new grill. Before we'd left Ft. Pierce, we had provisioned such that only fresh food would be required as we went along on our shakedown. But, we'd been here so long, our fresh stuff had been nearly exhausted. Fortunately, one of our anchorage buddies told us where to find our closest grocery store, only about a mile away. On the day when the last of our parts arrived, only a thin envelope, we went ashore to go shopping, intending to pick up our last pump parts as we returned. When we were cruising in the Bahamas, we'd bought a pull-behind, folding cart which served us well on our treks to the stores we favored. Carrying the folded one like a briefcase, we secured our dinghy to the City Marina dock and set out on foot. We had gotten only about halfway when a horn blatted at us, and we heard "SKIP!! LYDIA!" from our left. Whipping our heads around, our friend Bruce was in his truck, offering to take us and deliver us back. As this sort of thing happens only sometimes in our cruising, and we already knew him from all the advice and assistance we'd traded back and forth about our boats, we accepted. As our list was short (only eggs and fresh veggies), we were out and on our way quickly. As it happened, Bruce and we had mutual friends from the Seven Seas Cruising Association who were arriving in their boat that evening, and wanted to go to dinner with us that night. So, we dinghied back to our boat, put away our groceries and had our afternoon cocktail while we awaited our friends' arrival. Sure enough, as we're tilting the last into our throats, Equinox heaves into view, and throws out the hook next to us. Their crew, Dave and Trish, dinghy over to say hello, and check that our dinner arrangements are still in effect. Sure enough, all is well, and we set out again, crossing the Intra-Coastal Waterway on the way into City Marina, from which we'll walk the couple of blocks to our restaurant. All was extremely well, and fellowship flourished. Sated with good food and good friendship, we took our two dinghies over to the anchorage and turned in. Another great day while we were waiting to have it all done! Our finish to our visit to Ft. Pierce was time with Ted and Diane, a couple with a bread-and-breakfast business in THEIR home, Boatel, who were visiting the area. After we'd had dinner ashore, and wandered the FFFF (First Friday Festival in Ft.Pierce), we returned to our home, anxious to get under way. Our target was Lake Worth, the body of water between West Palm Beach and the affluent island of Palm Beach. But that's a story for another day, this having gone on for long enough for one missive, I think. You can see some of our shakedown pictures as a subgallery of the 2011-2012 Refit gallery. Depending on when you see this, there may well be pictures missing, as I've not had enough time to process all of them yet. However, as time goes on, all of the shakedown pictures will make it up there As annoying as the above is/was in the development of the "squawk list,' it was just the beginning... So, until next time, stay tuned! L8R Skip Morgan 461 #2 SV Flying Pig KI4MPC See our galleries at www.justpickone.org/skip/gallery ! Follow us at http://groups.yahoo.com/group/TheFlyingPigLog and/or http://groups.google.com/group/flyingpiglog When a man comes to like a sea life, he is not fit to live on land. - Dr. Samuel Johnson Morgan 461 #2 SV Flying Pig KI4MPC See our galleries at www.justpickone.org/skip/gallery ! Follow us at http://groups.yahoo.com/group/TheFlyingPigLog and/or http://groups.google.com/group/flyingpiglog When a man comes to like a sea life, he is not fit to live on land. - Dr. Samuel Johnson |
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