Seeline
New Member
Non sequitur: preventing this particular failure is clearly a certainty rather than a hope, if like in my boat you've got valves directly screwed on the engine outlets/inlets of the heating loop, and you keep them closed.
And as I said, the usefulness of the disabled function is absolutely none, with my type of boating.
I already acknowledged that this can be different for yourself and/or other boaters, though.
Can't see why you shouldn't accept that it's different for me too.
Lastly, of course I agree that there are dozens of other possible problem sources on a boat engine - that's stating the obvious.
But I don't think there's any way to get rid of them all, other than give up boating altogether.
To get rid of this one, I just had to close a couple of valves, with zero drawbacks (for me).
Pretty much a no brainer: unlikely as it might be this problem (but tell that to the chap who experienced it in open sea!) it still means dozens minus one... :encouragement:
Each to their own, of course, though I’m with the leave it in use brigade.
There’s no more chance of failure than any of the other coolant hoses and Calorifier hoses are generally far more accessible and easier to routinely examine/replace ... And relatively cheap.
I’m not a big fan of isolator valves either ... Useful if you want to change the Calorifier but not much help if a hose bursts as, by the time you notice it, the damage is done ... You may as well simply carry a spare hose for what they cost and replace it after you’ve mopped out the engine bay and before refilling from the 10 litres of ready mixed coolant we all carry
Free hot water from the engine ... Luvly jubly.




