Kelpie
Well-Known Member
I've never had a silencer on either of my boats which had these heaters.
The exhaust must be lagged, other wise the water from burning the diesel will condense and fill the exhaust over time.bought the heater and worked out where its going(under cockpit in front of fender locker), if it helps anyone with the layout of stbd side under genoa winch on colvic victor 34, needs 7ft of 316 24mm exhaust to route through cockpit locker. needs 15ft of 76mm air outlet ducting. questions are;
how close can the exhaust be to fibreglass locker bulkhead(read 2 inch) but anyone experience?
some sort of shield coz its going through fender locker.
source for 316 exhaust skin fitting on transom and does it need a 'down' cowl in case of wave slap or rain?
presume we need anti-syphon loop in exhaust?
Do we realy need a silencer-on mooring 90% of the time?
How far beneath cockpit sole for the heater mounting(vertical heat disipation) spelt wrong.
source for air ducting?
Thanks
The exhaust must be lagged, other wise the water from burning the diesel will condense and fill the exhaust over time…
The problem comes when it shuts down and isn't run for a long time.I get the physics of this, but surely any water that collects in there would be vaporised fairly instantly by the extreme hotness of the exhaust gases?
If the exhaust tube is losing heat through the sides, then the gases might be a fair bit cooler than 100degC, by the time they've gone through a metre or so of pipe.I get the physics of this, but surely any water that collects in there would be vaporised fairly instantly by the extreme hotness of the exhaust gases?
On my boat, the ducting from heater to saloon is inside another tube, so insulated a bit.Though I probably will buy 2nd hand eberspacher not chinese I am intrigued by the thread. Small boats are far from ideal. The exhaust must be above waterline when heeled and outside the confines of the cockpit. Even the transom can be problematic if cockpit canopy up as fumes can be blown in.
However the transom remains best choice unless the boat has high gunwales. And thats were the old D2(2kW) unit is on mine, half a boat length away from where heat is needed and only readily accessible to a trained monkey. So my boot and hose pipe locker is heated, the inflatable dingy sits on cosy floor, but the heat barely gets as far as the pilot house and fails to get to the saloon.
Sadly the only answer seems to be to get a D4 (4kW) unit and put up with the extra current draw. I run it from 3rd battery so I dont lose nav or lights if I run it too long. Fortunately or not my voyage out to sea normal involve running the engine for an hour to get clear of Plymouth sound, but the eberspacher would not suit extended winter pure sailing trips or live aboard
if your heater is old it may only need clea ning the soot out and ducting insulated .Though I probably will buy 2nd hand eberspacher not chinese I am intrigued by the thread. Small boats are far from ideal. The exhaust must be above waterline when heeled and outside the confines of the cockpit. Even the transom can be problematic if cockpit canopy up as fumes can be blown in.
However the transom remains best choice unless the boat has high gunwales. And thats were the old D2(2kW) unit is on mine, half a boat length away from where heat is needed and only readily accessible to a trained monkey. So my boot and hose pipe locker is heated, the inflatable dingy sits on cosy floor, but the heat barely gets as far as the pilot house and fails to get to the saloon.
Sadly the only answer seems to be to get a D4 (4kW) unit and put up with the extra current draw. I run it from 3rd battery so I dont lose nav or lights if I run it too long. Fortunately or not my voyage out to sea normal involve running the engine for an hour to get clear of Plymouth sound, but the eberspacher would not suit extended winter pure sailing trips or live aboard
The problem is that insulation was £16 a metre last I looked, so thats another £50 and of course the overall diameter increases. As the duct space is behind the diesel tank its rather tight thats an issue- however I dont much like the idea of heating my diesel tank by mischance either. My propex heater in van is a lot less bother and quieter but installing one of them would mean carrying more gas and my wretched gas locker only takes two camping gaz 907s. Small boats!if your heater is old it may only need clea ning the soot out and ducting insulated .
Just being controversial for a moment…. I have modified all my buying to avoid anything identifiably direct from China. I’m not trying to stir up a hot political debate but I do see a real threat from the east over the next few decades and we have handed them our economies on a plate in the last 30 years. If we all do our bit and slowly revert to buying non-Chinese products as much as it is possible things may even out slightly. My present boat has a secondhand Eberspacher, my last had a new Mikuni.
Genuinely not trying to stir things up but it does worry me…..
The exhaust is made o f stainless, not aluminium.I have read on another thread that a drain point is only applicable to installations in motor vehicles, where the exhaust is outside the cabin, and would potentially introduce CO into a closed environment such as a boat.
If the acidic condensate would corrode the aluminium internals of a heater, isn't there always the danger that it would corrode an exhaust pipe made of similar metal, also posing the possibility of CO poisoning?
You'll just be buying stuff indirectly from China.Just being controversial for a moment…. I have modified all my buying to avoid anything identifiably direct from China. I’m not trying to stir up a hot political debate but I do see a real threat from the east over the next few decades and we have handed them our economies on a plate in the last 30 years. If we all do our bit and slowly revert to buying non-Chinese products as much as it is possible things may even out slightly. My present boat has a secondhand Eberspacher, my last had a new Mikuni.
Genuinely not trying to stir things up but it does worry me…..
My Chinaspacher cost about £150 including all the extra bits.My whole setup of secondhand Eberspacher cost about £300 with all the little missing bits. Although the Chinese heaters are cheap I thought you had to ‘top up’ with all the plumbing etc?
I agree that everything comes from China ultimately but at least a European will make a cut if we buy locally.
No intention to upset anyone but I reckon we can all work towards rebalancing things even in small ways.
Isnt that the truth.. there is a youtube guy who does comparisons/shoot outs with tools.. wire cutters to cordless drills etc.. all the usual well known brands and a few cheapys thrown in for good measure.You'll just be buying stuff indirectly from China.
There have been quite a few dead recently from CO including one at a local YC. Exhaust fitting desoldering, wind blowing fumes into canopy due to vortices by stern and similar, poor exhaust fitting on trawler etc etc. CO poisoning makes you sleepy not alarmed, so multiple battery CO alarms vital. MAIB and other sites make grim readingThe exhaust is made o f stainless, not aluminium.
If you need a condensate drain, then you need to engineer that in materials which will survive the chemistry.
But if the liquid drains away, the exhaust parts will not be left immersed in concentrated by-products.
I suspect a lot of marine heater exhausts simply leak. The one I took off had a drain hole !
The previous owner had used that for some years without the CO alarm going off.
With any heater I think a CO alarm is sensible.
But there would have to be a lot of CO in my locker for much to reach the cabin.
Also these are powerful heaters, there is no need to close down the boat to keep warm, you can afford to have a hatch open, just as you might with the stove on for longer than it takes to boil a kettle.
If you want a warm dry boat, you have to let some of the warm damp air out,
As I said on a previous thread, it's more like heating a n old car than heating a bedsit. Turn it up full and open the quarter lights to banish the condensation!