John100156
Well-Known Member
.....The number of seacocks in modern boats terrifies me especially as most owners don't know where most of them are.....
....and dont excercise them enough too! Then they wonder why the seize up....
.....The number of seacocks in modern boats terrifies me especially as most owners don't know where most of them are.....
Yes I agree but the boat builders don't help by putting them in inaccesible places that many owners won't find and then supplying a manual which doesn't show precisely where they are....and dont excercise them enough too! Then they wonder why the seize up....
Not geeky at all. Ferretti supply a seacock plan in their manuals but it's a generalised plan rather than specific to your boat so I've annotated the plan for my particular boat in the same way as you. I've suffered siezed seacocks on boats in the past and I try to move all of them at least once a season.Deleted User, apologies for the geekiness, but i like to have an A4 laminated card "seacock plan" for the boat.
My top tip is throw away duplicates and rip out the non English/French language pages, and you cut the size of this pile to 1/3rd)
I do have a bit of first hand experience on a similar CMMS (Computerized Maintenance Management System).A few US trawler yacht builders now sign new owners up to this service http://www.vesselvanguard.com/welcome whereby all the vessel's manuals and component lists are stored on an online database and the system warns the owner or skipper of when maintenance is due on every component. I have no first hand experience but it seems like a good idea to me provided of course that the info stored on your boat is accurate and comprehensive
Geez, do you mean that you have no less than 16 of them (or possibly even more, considering the split arrows)?The text boxes give the size of the seacok, its function, ...
Geez, do you mean that you have no less than 16 of them (or possibly even more, considering the split arrows)?![]()
That's not my idea, actually.
It's called sea chest, and incidentally it's mentioned also in the article I previously linked (end of page 6 - beginning of page 7).
What you probably remember as 'my' idea was a modification of the sea chest, with some way to close it at the bottom and feed it with fresh water from the tank, thus being able to rinse the engines and gensets with fresh water at any time.
But I've not seen that on any boat so far.
Let me know if you see one, in order to claim my royalties...![]()
Fairline supply a manual for the whole boat but it is pretty lightweight and I never refer to it. Then they supply several cases of manufacturer's manuals covering all the bought-in components, which refer to from time to time (My top tip is throw away duplicates and rip out the non English/French language pages, and you cut the size of this pile to 1/3rd)
They do not supply a "database" of every fitted component, other than the stack of manuals. TBH, speaking personally, I dont think I want or need such a databse: i get very much under the floorboards of the boat and know every component reasonably well, and a lot of the stuff was specced by me, so if I need something I know exactly the part or have enough clues to find it quickly on the web. Also, the relationship one can have with Fairline far exceeds what you can have with Ferretti: I have the mobile numbers and emails of all the key guys who made/commissioned the boat annd I call them if they have the bit of information I needed to get me out of trouble, and they're all really helpful guys. I also have direct contact with and am customer of several key OEM suppliers
I rented a Robertson and Caine catamaran in the caribee last winter and that came with a full databse of all the equipment suppliers, in a lever arch file, but it didn't specify model numbers of the parts so it wasn't as great as it ought to have been. I mean you can look at the light fittings, say, to see they're made by Quick, so lugging around a book telling me the name/address/url of Quick doesn't tell me anything Google can't, tbh
IMHO the thing that keeps the boat going, free of breakdowns, is a 3G connection and a load of spare parts. You can get any info you want from the 'net, and if you have boxes of spares you're generally ok
In this respect, I must disagree with jfm: reducing the amount of paper kept onboard, and relying on the web or phone calls whenever necessary, just doesn't cut the mustard.
would be interesting to see the list, I have 14:
engines 2, genny's 2, airco 1, desalinator 1, anker shower 1, fire hose 1, toilets seawater inlet 1, toilets outlets 5,
Do the Lumishores go through the hull or is it just their wires?MATCH 2 will have:
engines inlet 2
Stabs hydraulics system cooling inlet 1
genset inlet 2
genset silent outlet 2 *
main airco in 1
main airco underwater silent outlet 1 *
Aft crew space independent airco unit inlet 1
desalinator inlet 1
Black tank discharge 2
Aft deck drain 1**
Emergency WC-straight-to-sea 1
Total 15
Match 1 had more than this; I've reduced them for Match 2. Two of the discharges shown in the pic are above waterline (manifolds for lots of hatch and deck drains) so I don't count them. Also the red arrows in the above pic show log/transducers as well as seacocks; anything that is a hole in the hull, so they're not all seacocks. Items * in list above are not necessary but serve to reduce at-anchor noise. Item **, don't ask, too hard to explain![]()
Do the Lumishores go through the hull or is it just their wires?
Wires? Wires? You mean they're not wifi?