JollyRodgers
Well-Known Member
No videos for this issue I'm afraid
Decided to take out the boat for the first time without anyone else other than the girlfriend (new sailors!), which was fun and also a little scary.
Beta marine diesel was fired up with the engine water seacock open (as usual), fuel in the tank etc. We left the lock and headed for a poodle down the harbour, with a plan to pull up next to a pontoon for some lunch after some sailing and practicing what we had learnt.
After about 25 minutes or so with the engine on, it just cuts out. Now I'm wondering what the hell has happened - is there enough fuel in the tanks? Did I accidently turn it off somehow? Where am I going to go? (tidal waters + fin keel) Who am I going to call to tow me on the radio? (presumably the marina)
Worth noting that there was water coming out of the stern all the time, as it should.
I hit the kill switch, twisted and pulled the key out. Counted to 3 and fired it up again - and it was fine.
I ran the throttle much lower than before hand, spun the boat back and headed to the safety of my berth at the marina. The engine ran perfectly, as if nothing ever happened for the next 30-35 minutes or so. All dials were reading correctly too.
The engine was fully serviced last month. It was brand new as of 2008 and has had a full service carried out each year since. I wouldve done the engine service myself, but I didnt know what I was looking at originally and was pushed for time to get it back into the water. I plan on doing it next year though.
My girlfriend said that she remembered someone who we went out with for some instructing telling us not to use too much throttle too soon after starting the engine because it can make them cut out (not sure the reasoning behind this?). She reckoned that I was going too fast too quickly after starting it and that's what did it, but only saying that because of what the person told us the week before. I was giving it perhaps 75-80% throttle because the boat infront of me was going fast and I had about 7-8 boats behind me and didn't want to hold everyone up - it was super busy for overtaking and a narrow channel too.
We got to do lots of stuff before the engine died on us though, so the day out wasn't a complete disaster. Still enjoying learning about it all and fixing things as I go along. The learning curve is pretty steep, but sometimes I wonder if I took a bit too much on too soon :-(
Any ideas?
Alex
Decided to take out the boat for the first time without anyone else other than the girlfriend (new sailors!), which was fun and also a little scary.
Beta marine diesel was fired up with the engine water seacock open (as usual), fuel in the tank etc. We left the lock and headed for a poodle down the harbour, with a plan to pull up next to a pontoon for some lunch after some sailing and practicing what we had learnt.
After about 25 minutes or so with the engine on, it just cuts out. Now I'm wondering what the hell has happened - is there enough fuel in the tanks? Did I accidently turn it off somehow? Where am I going to go? (tidal waters + fin keel) Who am I going to call to tow me on the radio? (presumably the marina)
Worth noting that there was water coming out of the stern all the time, as it should.
I hit the kill switch, twisted and pulled the key out. Counted to 3 and fired it up again - and it was fine.
I ran the throttle much lower than before hand, spun the boat back and headed to the safety of my berth at the marina. The engine ran perfectly, as if nothing ever happened for the next 30-35 minutes or so. All dials were reading correctly too.
The engine was fully serviced last month. It was brand new as of 2008 and has had a full service carried out each year since. I wouldve done the engine service myself, but I didnt know what I was looking at originally and was pushed for time to get it back into the water. I plan on doing it next year though.
My girlfriend said that she remembered someone who we went out with for some instructing telling us not to use too much throttle too soon after starting the engine because it can make them cut out (not sure the reasoning behind this?). She reckoned that I was going too fast too quickly after starting it and that's what did it, but only saying that because of what the person told us the week before. I was giving it perhaps 75-80% throttle because the boat infront of me was going fast and I had about 7-8 boats behind me and didn't want to hold everyone up - it was super busy for overtaking and a narrow channel too.
We got to do lots of stuff before the engine died on us though, so the day out wasn't a complete disaster. Still enjoying learning about it all and fixing things as I go along. The learning curve is pretty steep, but sometimes I wonder if I took a bit too much on too soon :-(
Any ideas?
Alex