Quandary
Well-Known Member
The diesel engines on every boat I have owned regardless of type of cooling, has been fitted with a an anti syphon valve above it, usually a VP inverted Y fitting that needs a tiny rubber disc with a hole in it replaced every year and for most of the time, until the revs. rise a bit, it dribbles into a plastic sweety jar or similar placed below it. ( I know some folk use big plastic Vetus versions and sometimes like to watch them dribble through a pipe in to the cockpit).
This boat, a Moody with a indirect cooled VP2020 and saildrive, does not have one, (or if it is there I have not found it), the VP 2020 manual states that 'some engines will have one', implying that it is not always essential. I presume this has something to do with heights or angles of pipework but this plumbing looks not much different from the others?
Can some one explain the criteria defining when one is needed, I don't want to introduce the bothersome task of looking after something that I can do without and the boat has managed twenty years without one, but I still would like to understand why she does not need it when most boats have them?
This boat, a Moody with a indirect cooled VP2020 and saildrive, does not have one, (or if it is there I have not found it), the VP 2020 manual states that 'some engines will have one', implying that it is not always essential. I presume this has something to do with heights or angles of pipework but this plumbing looks not much different from the others?
Can some one explain the criteria defining when one is needed, I don't want to introduce the bothersome task of looking after something that I can do without and the boat has managed twenty years without one, but I still would like to understand why she does not need it when most boats have them?