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#11
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"rhys" wrote in message
... On Thu, 16 Dec 2004 18:53:34 GMT, "Roger Long" wrote: I told him the boat was from the Great Lakes and he said, "Oh, no problem. In that case, it's a great engine and should be almost as good as new. You should get 15 more years out of it easy." That's about right, and a very good argument for freshwater cooling via an exchanger. Even in lake water, it can't hurt to run clean coolant instead of whatever you happen to be sailing in, which can have goo, poo and/or mussels in it. ...as time progresses I'll need all the other points of view I can handle! I can't always count on guys like Skip Gundlach being online G. Hey! I resemble that remark. However, today is a good day for me to see this, as I just winterized (in my case, draining the water out is all I have to do) my ski boat, as we're headed into the teens this weekend. The exhaust manifolds spewed water that looked just like the red mud bottom of the lake. There's not enough circulation/volume, and it tends to accumulate, so, there you have it. The water from the block and water pump was totally clear... You'll not likely find a freshwater cooled ski boat, and in any case, it was the exhaust manifolds, but it sure illustrated the point! FWIW, for the very few watching, Flying Pig is coming along agonizingly and excruciatingly slowly and expensively. Everything expands once you get into it, and only one project is anywhere near completion, and another, which should have been finished over a month ago, is just now ready to proceed smoothly, all the other hiccups (presumably) having been dealt with. I'm accumulating pictures in the currently-about-15 project folders; once any have finished, I'll put them up on the gallery and tell the story. At this point I'm praying the critical ones (I'm sure the less-than-critical likely won't be touched) will be finished in time for us to leave... L8R Skip and Lydia -- Morgan 461 #2 SV Flying Pig http://tinyurl.com/384p2 "Twenty years from now you will be more disappointed by the things you didn't do than by the ones you did do. So throw off the bowlines. Sail away from the safe harbor. Catch the trade winds in your sails. Explore. Dream. Discover." - Mark Twain |
#12
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You were lucky. The general guideline from the mechanics I know is that
it takes 30 seconds to start to destroy an impeller when run dry. There are some impellers made from fancier materials that suposedly can be run dry for a while, but they cost 3x or so more. I also suspect that a new impeller can survive longer. I replace my impeller every spring as part of my normal recommissioning to try to avoid any sort of impeller failure. I also open the seacock once in the spring and then never close it until fall unless I am leaving the boat unattended for a long period of time. So starting the engine with the seacock closes is not likely. Doug s/v CAllista "Dave" wrote in message ... On Fri, 17 Dec 2004 17:54:02 -0500, "Doug Dotson" said: The impeller will self-destruct way before any temperature alarm sounds. Not my experience, at least on my Yanmar. Had the engine heat up enough to shut itself down once this summer before I noticed the temp light. Pulled the impeller this fall--no damage. There is no substitute for good procedures that are followed. So true. In this case I carefully followed my checklist on day 1, but forgot on day 2 that I had closed the sea cock the previous night. |
#13
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On Fri, 17 Dec 2004 17:54:02 -0500, "Doug Dotson"
wrote: There is no substitute for good procedures that are followed. Doug, hard experience made me a convert to that philosophy. G |
#14
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On Fri, 17 Dec 2004 18:38:27 -0500, "Scott Vernon"
wrote: the 'key on the seacock' thing is a good idea. My Yanmar doesn't have a key, I look for the water out the exhaust. Wow, you mean I can steal your boat by casting off and punching a start button? G If not a key on the seacock, then hang a GPS, your "sailing hat", a pair of sunglasses, whatever. The idea is that you are persuaded to check the seacock before you fire the engine, if, like me, you have irregular visits and don't care to leave it open. I close every seacock on the boat, by the way, excepting the cockpit scuppers, which are pretty massively clamped at the hull ends. R. |
#15
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On Fri, 17 Dec 2004 19:21:48 -0500, "Skip Gundlach" skipgundlach sez
use my name at earthlink dot fishcatcher (net) - with apologies for the spamtrap wrote: You'll not likely find a freshwater cooled ski boat, and in any case, it was the exhaust manifolds, but it sure illustrated the point! We winterize for real in Toronto, and part of that is putting a T-connection after the pump but before the block. This T has a hose fitting for a garden hose and you can flush the block with city pressure straight out the back end. The first 15-20 seconds ain't pretty, even in a clean lake. After that, you seal that T off and run pink antifreeze via the raw water pump until it too flies out the back. Then fog the carb, drain the fuel pump, spoon oil down the cylinders...and as the guy who taught me this stuff says, you can "sleep soundly as the February blizzards howl around your frozen boat". FWIW, for the very few watching, Flying Pig is coming along agonizingly and excruciatingly slowly and expensively. Everything expands once you get into it, and only one project is anywhere near completion, and another, which should have been finished over a month ago, is just now ready to proceed smoothly, all the other hiccups (presumably) having been dealt with. This can't be news: the recreational boater's "rule of three" is in full effect. Multiply all costs by three to achieve a predictable tally, just as the word "marine" in front of a boat gear noun implies the same multiple. R. |
#16
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On Sat, 18 Dec 2004 14:14:52 -0500, rhys wrote:
We winterize for real in Toronto, and part of that is putting a T-connection after the pump but before the block. This T has a hose fitting for a garden hose and you can flush the block with city pressure straight out the back end. The first 15-20 seconds ain't pretty, even in a clean lake. After that, you seal that T off and run pink antifreeze via the raw water pump until it too flies out the back. I have a big strainer basket mounted above the water line. Raw water runs from the intake up to the strainer, then back down to the water pump. As a result, I can take the top off the strainer and feed whatever I want into the engine by pouring it into the strainer. On haulout day I run the engine, keeping it warm until I'm in the haulout slip, then close the seacock and pour the pink stuff into the strainer. With the engine warm the thermostat is open enough to get flow everywhere. Then I shut down the engine and pull the drain plugs, confident that anything left in the system is unlikely to freeze. The other advantage of the strainer is that it provides a very obvious direct check point for water flow peeking up through the engine cover in the companionway. It may be something in the lubricity of the pink stuff, but I have had no problems with impeller damage from modest amounts of dry running around haulout and launch. Atomic 4 in this case. Ryk |
#17
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"rhys" wrote in message
... the 'key on the seacock' thing is a good idea. My Yanmar doesn't have a key, I look for the water out the exhaust. Wow, you mean I can steal your boat by casting off and punching a start button? G Yes. You could also steal it by sailing away. If not a key on the seacock, then hang a GPS, your "sailing hat", a pair of sunglasses, whatever. The idea is that you are persuaded to check the seacock before you fire the engine, if, like me, you have irregular visits and don't care to leave it open. I close every seacock on the boat, by the way, excepting the cockpit scuppers, which are pretty massively clamped at the hull ends. I keep all mine closed too. After closing the engine seacock, I leave the engine house cover off whch reminds me to open the seacock when I return. -- Scott Vernon Plowville Pa _/)__/)_/)_ |
#18
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nice "catch" roger....
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#19
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On Sun, 19 Dec 2004 10:15:15 -0500, "Scott Vernon"
wrote: Yes. You could also steal it by sailing away. How did you know I can do that??? G I keep all mine closed too. After closing the engine seacock, I leave the engine house cover off whch reminds me to open the seacock when I return. Nice. Whatever works is good. Two boats sunk at dock in five years in a 200-slip club here, one with a failed clamp at the head inlet, the other with a failed hose at the raw water inlet. Both skippers got the phone call: "dude, I think your boat's sinking..." Both could have been prevented with closing the cocks when off the boat. R. |
#20
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Say, what about rigging a limit switch to the seacock lever and hooking it
up to a loud alarm that goes off if the starter is engaged? -- Roger Long |
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