Quandary
Well-Known Member
My boat, 2007, came fitted with a 25l. Isotemp calorifier. This is a typical piece of Italian manufacture, elegant shiny metal cylinder outside but everything is pressed from quite thin sheet. The inner tank is a stainless steel cylinder with two domed ends welded on. The outer end has an oval aperture cut in it, inside which fits a slightly larger oval domed sheet through which the immersion heater loop passes. The two plates overlap (though not enough in my opinion) and the removable inner one has a rubber (neoprene?) gasket which fits around the edge of it. To seal you tighten a single bolt through a pressed metal bridge, to pull the inner plate and gasket back against the domed cylinder end. After some time we discovered that this his joint was leaking when the system was pressurised by the pump. When the immersion heater plate was taken out the gasket was cut for about 2" around the edge of the thin plate. (Note, this is not the contact area which is away from the edge). I replaced the gasket, (about £18, but then its a marine part) at the time, I noticed that the edges of both the removable plate and the tank seemed sharp to touch so I smoothed them with abrasive paper. Oddly, the compression and seal is on the top face of the gasket, not where it is being cut at the edge of the sheet. A month or so later the tank was leaking again, I dismantled it again and found the new gasket had become cut again. As I was away cruising, I reassembled carefully and tightly (the position of the plate seemed to have become slightly displaced) which included heating the gasket with boiling water and at the same time spent another hour on the sharp edges and on trying to match the profile of the two pieces of steel sheet more exactly. It was fine at first, though we were careful not to leave the water pump on for long. However we later encountered a massive steep wake from a big fast white Coastguard tug in the Sound of Mull which nearly knocked our teeth out and now the thing is leaking again.
Before replacing it, I would attempt to try to repair it again with a new gasket, this time perhaps supplemented by a sealant: someone suggested silicone shower seal might work, if left to set for 24 hours before filling with water?
I am tempted to replace it with a 'Surecal' calorifier from the Isle of Wight, not as pretty, but not much more than half the price, is copper, with a proper heat exchanger coil, rather than just a loop, and includes a proper screw in immersion heater rather than a bit of thin plate held by a single bolt, but first would like to make another serious effort to get this leak permanently cured.
Anyone got any suggestions for a more permanent fix. Is there a sealant that might work with hot water under pressure if applied to both sides of the gasket. One that hopefully could be removed if it needs dismantling again?
Or would it be better to omit the gasket altogether and try an adhesive sealant that would ensure that the two plates can not move relative to one another?
The boat is out of warranty and I have since improved the fit and smoothed the sharp edges and I am convinced this it was a badly designed and made product but it is expensive to replace; is the Surecal better?
Before replacing it, I would attempt to try to repair it again with a new gasket, this time perhaps supplemented by a sealant: someone suggested silicone shower seal might work, if left to set for 24 hours before filling with water?
I am tempted to replace it with a 'Surecal' calorifier from the Isle of Wight, not as pretty, but not much more than half the price, is copper, with a proper heat exchanger coil, rather than just a loop, and includes a proper screw in immersion heater rather than a bit of thin plate held by a single bolt, but first would like to make another serious effort to get this leak permanently cured.
Anyone got any suggestions for a more permanent fix. Is there a sealant that might work with hot water under pressure if applied to both sides of the gasket. One that hopefully could be removed if it needs dismantling again?
Or would it be better to omit the gasket altogether and try an adhesive sealant that would ensure that the two plates can not move relative to one another?
The boat is out of warranty and I have since improved the fit and smoothed the sharp edges and I am convinced this it was a badly designed and made product but it is expensive to replace; is the Surecal better?