MYAG
Well-Known Member
Ok so I am in the school of “bilges should be powder dry” at all times unless you have a problem….. that’s how it is with my boat with any washdown or rain water from decks or storage lockers/bins etc; channelled by hoses to a port or stbd manifold in the engine room then routed out by gravity through a discharge fitting just above the water line. - no problem there.
However I have been interested in a US sportfish type boat around 30-40ft with outboards for a while and went over to MIBS last week to take a closer look at them. Speaking to my shortlist of brands, I asked about the drainage and was (to my surprise) told that it is quite normal practice there to drain out through the bilges (including grey water and a/c condensate for some builders), relying on the bilge pumps to discharge as the bilge level rises sufficiently or manually operating the bilge pump switch at the helm more frequently if preferred. (Admittedly this is how it is setup on my Nouvurania 430 tender for rainwater/washdown but that is a 14ft dinghy with no accommodation and almost zero freeboard.)
Would be interested to hear who else uses this method on their boats and if it works out ok in practice? Is this a US thing or are other boat builders in Europe doing similar too? I suppose it gives your bilge pumps a workout regularly if nothing else.
However I have been interested in a US sportfish type boat around 30-40ft with outboards for a while and went over to MIBS last week to take a closer look at them. Speaking to my shortlist of brands, I asked about the drainage and was (to my surprise) told that it is quite normal practice there to drain out through the bilges (including grey water and a/c condensate for some builders), relying on the bilge pumps to discharge as the bilge level rises sufficiently or manually operating the bilge pump switch at the helm more frequently if preferred. (Admittedly this is how it is setup on my Nouvurania 430 tender for rainwater/washdown but that is a 14ft dinghy with no accommodation and almost zero freeboard.)
Would be interested to hear who else uses this method on their boats and if it works out ok in practice? Is this a US thing or are other boat builders in Europe doing similar too? I suppose it gives your bilge pumps a workout regularly if nothing else.