johng39
Well-Known Member
After my first year with my new boat I have annoying black soot marks up the side of my boat that I have cleaned numerous times. Now there is not much I can do about the engines producing the smoke, but wondered if re-configuring the tell tale on the side may solve the issue?
The boat has underwater exhausts and before the bend that takes the exhaust out of the hull underwater, there is a take-off for the tell tales at the side. I have not measured this as yet, but my guess is around a 60mm pipe that exits just above the waterline. The annoying part is that there is a moulding on the exterior that points the gases down into the water, so any helpful soul passing me a mooring line gets soaked by the gases being blown into the water.
So underway the gases (due to the fact that the side exhaust is taken of the top of the elbow) blow down the rear third of the boat and the water / soot gets stuck to the boat. Regardless of polishing /waxing it is a sod of a job to remove it........ So, can I:
a) Block the things off
b) reconfigure to take the outlet from the bottom of the elbow (where water will be) and hopefully the mixture of gas and water will leave less soot down the side.
I call these tell tales, but they are not really as you cannot see water from them, my feeling is that these are necessary to stop pressure build up due to the underwater exhaust configuration perhaps? I am no expert, hence the question and possible reasons.
Also if I am correct and the pressure needs to come from the exhaust side exit, would this be true at planing speeds where the soot is generated? If so I may be able to rig up a flap that comes down to block this off at planing speeds.
If I cannot, then I have the option to extend the pipe to the rear of the boat and cut new side exhausts I guess.
Help greatly appreciated.
The boat has underwater exhausts and before the bend that takes the exhaust out of the hull underwater, there is a take-off for the tell tales at the side. I have not measured this as yet, but my guess is around a 60mm pipe that exits just above the waterline. The annoying part is that there is a moulding on the exterior that points the gases down into the water, so any helpful soul passing me a mooring line gets soaked by the gases being blown into the water.
So underway the gases (due to the fact that the side exhaust is taken of the top of the elbow) blow down the rear third of the boat and the water / soot gets stuck to the boat. Regardless of polishing /waxing it is a sod of a job to remove it........ So, can I:
a) Block the things off
b) reconfigure to take the outlet from the bottom of the elbow (where water will be) and hopefully the mixture of gas and water will leave less soot down the side.
I call these tell tales, but they are not really as you cannot see water from them, my feeling is that these are necessary to stop pressure build up due to the underwater exhaust configuration perhaps? I am no expert, hence the question and possible reasons.
Also if I am correct and the pressure needs to come from the exhaust side exit, would this be true at planing speeds where the soot is generated? If so I may be able to rig up a flap that comes down to block this off at planing speeds.
If I cannot, then I have the option to extend the pipe to the rear of the boat and cut new side exhausts I guess.
Help greatly appreciated.