sarabande
Well-Known Member
Coming from a twitchy background where contingency plans for big nuclear power stations and data centres have to be 100% effective, I am open to suggestions about the main engine sea water inlet valve.
The valve works smoothly (the previous owner was meticulous in maintenance) and the lever is easily and quickly accessible through the engine cover. My preference is for the valve to be OPEN only when the engine is in use, or likely to be in use. Is that a valid and practical preference, especially as it is planned that there will be some lengthy passages without use of engine ?
Then, to ensure that the engine is never started without the valve in the OPEN position, and that the valve is always SHUT when not in use, how about the following to help aged crew and also younger visiting sailing slaves ?
1 Attach engine key to a brightly-coloured tag on a short line with an eye in the free end
2 Make uncluttered clip point for key on engine cover
3 When key is not needed in the control panel, it lives on the clip on the cover
4 When engine is not required, the eye is placed on the lever of the valve in the SHUT position (length of line ensures it cannot be placed on lever in OPEN position), and key and tag secured on the cover
5 When key is needed in control panel in cockpit, the line and tag are removed from the lever and the valve lever is turned to OPEN.
6 Key then inserted into switch in control panel, and replaced onto SHUT valve when not in use.
7 Key in switch will have bright tag visible as an aide-memoire
( a spare engine key is kept securely elsewhere)
I can see one tiny gap in the procedure...
Oh PS, I am presently writing a boat Operations Manual to help when new crew are on board and to act as a reference guide for aged owner when fatigued. Hence the use of caps for OPEN and SHUT, and similar critical control positions.
The valve works smoothly (the previous owner was meticulous in maintenance) and the lever is easily and quickly accessible through the engine cover. My preference is for the valve to be OPEN only when the engine is in use, or likely to be in use. Is that a valid and practical preference, especially as it is planned that there will be some lengthy passages without use of engine ?
Then, to ensure that the engine is never started without the valve in the OPEN position, and that the valve is always SHUT when not in use, how about the following to help aged crew and also younger visiting sailing slaves ?
1 Attach engine key to a brightly-coloured tag on a short line with an eye in the free end
2 Make uncluttered clip point for key on engine cover
3 When key is not needed in the control panel, it lives on the clip on the cover
4 When engine is not required, the eye is placed on the lever of the valve in the SHUT position (length of line ensures it cannot be placed on lever in OPEN position), and key and tag secured on the cover
5 When key is needed in control panel in cockpit, the line and tag are removed from the lever and the valve lever is turned to OPEN.
6 Key then inserted into switch in control panel, and replaced onto SHUT valve when not in use.
7 Key in switch will have bright tag visible as an aide-memoire
( a spare engine key is kept securely elsewhere)
I can see one tiny gap in the procedure...
Oh PS, I am presently writing a boat Operations Manual to help when new crew are on board and to act as a reference guide for aged owner when fatigued. Hence the use of caps for OPEN and SHUT, and similar critical control positions.