Tranona
Well-Known Member
At least nobody has suggested Vaseline yet!
Hi those are both of interest, and I will investigate. Hope to go to the boat tomorrow and try some of the suggestions here, including taste! I'll post the outcome here.interesting that no Bav bashers have turned up on this thread! (unless they were put off by corn starch debate)
I've got a 2006 Bavaria 30 too and have experienced two leaks. One from the bicolour navigation light wiring on the pulpit (solved by silicone sealant round the cable, although as you say this leaks into the forepeak and is unlikely to find it's way into saloon bilge).
The other was from the mast wiring after I unknowingly knocked the through-deck fitting. Didn't notice for ages as it was running behind the roof-wall GRP moulding cover in the forecabin and down into the port-side hanging locker. This might have found it's way down to main bilge...?
sorry if I missed it, but did you do the taste test yet?
The forward compartment beneath the sole boards on my Sadler has a high-water rust mark and the keel bolt washers are quite rusty. The water leak here is from the toilet, so go easy on the taste test!Hi those are both of interest, and I will investigate. Hope to go to the boat tomorrow and try some of the suggestions here, including taste! I'll post the outcome here.
Ha! Likewise I had a leak from the toilet which ended up in the bilges. Careful now.The forward compartment beneath the sole boards on my Sadler has a high-water rust mark and the keel bolt washers are quite rusty. The water leak here is from the toilet, so go easy on the taste test!
You say no sign of impact damage. This is important. A keel strike capable of unsettling the hull joint to admit seawater is almost bound to be substantial. If the keel bolts show no signs of rusting or cracking round the seating you should look elsewhere. Deck drainage runaway pipes are high on my list of suspects plus rigging seating above the chain plates. Even windows subject to forced water impact can leak.I'm going to give the full story because I am genuinely baffled at what to do.
We bought a Bav 30 5 years ago, and for the first 2 years everything was fine, including the bilges! which were bone dry. Then on a trip up the Avon Gorge we hit something hard, which gave us a fright; but all seemed OK, and when we took the boat out for antifoul a few months later there was absolutely no movement in the keel or any sign of damage.
However since then the bilges have started to accumulate water - not much, maybe a cm or so over a few weeks ... until we recently realised that on the occasions when we were out in rougher weather rather more water accumulated. (WE thought for a while it might be other things like the water tank leaking, but I've now proved to my own satisfaction that the freshwater plumbing goes nowhere near the bilges.) This came to a head last week when we sailed across the Solway Firth to Kirkudbright with the wind on the nose and wind over tide - lots of slamming, healing and pitching. And yes, when we anchored there was rather more water sloshing around than we would like.
Having thoroughly pumped and dried the bilges I am pretty sure that there IS seepage around just one of the keel bolts - I thought I could see it but that may have been me imaging things! So, some of the large number of questions I have to resolve this are
1) How serious is this likely to be? Is it one of those things we could live with for years, or is the keel in imminent danger of falling off?
2) Is it worth just redoing the one bolt first (remove it; grind it, reseat in suitable compound then retighten to approved torque); or will nothing less than the removal and refitting of the entire keel do?
3) Is there anyone (surveyor) in NW England who could offer a qualified opinion on the matter, and
4) Can anyone recommend a boatyard within easy reach of Whitehaven who have a good reputation for this sort of work?
Thanks in advance for any constructive comments you may have.
Still need to find the leak though!