sutton sailor
Well-Known Member
I bought a MG Spring 25 last September. After I had bought her I found inside some of those condensation traps, so I thought this may be a problem. On the 36 hour trip from Plymouth to Southampton there was no problem. But there was plenty of wind and water outside !!
Over the winter in the boat yard I have had a lot of condensation. What I did initially was to replace the absorbtion tablets in the condensation traps. The boat had no ventilators as such, so I left the fore hatch locked in the 1/2" open position, the main hatch slides over the washboards and leaves a 2" wide by 18" long horizontal gap. I left the cabin and heads open. When I first returned 6 weeks later there was condensation everywhere and black mould was starting to appear. I fitted a solar powered ventilator in the rear cabin deck head. The camber of the deck was such that it's integral solar panel was canted toward the sun, and thus operates it's fan. This made an improvement. I subsequently fitted a 2nd solar powered ventilator in the deck head of the heads compartment. Unfortunately the camber of the deck is such that with the low altitude of the winter sun the light intensity was not sufficient to power the fan. Then to top it off the neighbours boat due south of mine which was a much taller boat to start with put up a cover so high the owner could walk over the deck unobstructed so it cuts out direct sun light to both solar vents. Apart from the condensation inside the boat I also noticed condensation in the huge cockpit locker, this space extends from the starboard side right arround the stern which is a sugar scoop style. Condensation form this locker seems to be leaking in to the bilge from the bettom of the starboard side and also from the stern through the internal moulding wetting the foam mattress. I am planning to do some GRP work to seal the leak into the rear cabin to stop the foam mattress getting wet. I could perhaps insulate the stern with closed cell foam, but this would be an unpleasant job as access is limited and there are a multitude of curved surfaces further complicated by the twin rudders and there associated linkage.
Can the forum advise. Please.
Over the winter in the boat yard I have had a lot of condensation. What I did initially was to replace the absorbtion tablets in the condensation traps. The boat had no ventilators as such, so I left the fore hatch locked in the 1/2" open position, the main hatch slides over the washboards and leaves a 2" wide by 18" long horizontal gap. I left the cabin and heads open. When I first returned 6 weeks later there was condensation everywhere and black mould was starting to appear. I fitted a solar powered ventilator in the rear cabin deck head. The camber of the deck was such that it's integral solar panel was canted toward the sun, and thus operates it's fan. This made an improvement. I subsequently fitted a 2nd solar powered ventilator in the deck head of the heads compartment. Unfortunately the camber of the deck is such that with the low altitude of the winter sun the light intensity was not sufficient to power the fan. Then to top it off the neighbours boat due south of mine which was a much taller boat to start with put up a cover so high the owner could walk over the deck unobstructed so it cuts out direct sun light to both solar vents. Apart from the condensation inside the boat I also noticed condensation in the huge cockpit locker, this space extends from the starboard side right arround the stern which is a sugar scoop style. Condensation form this locker seems to be leaking in to the bilge from the bettom of the starboard side and also from the stern through the internal moulding wetting the foam mattress. I am planning to do some GRP work to seal the leak into the rear cabin to stop the foam mattress getting wet. I could perhaps insulate the stern with closed cell foam, but this would be an unpleasant job as access is limited and there are a multitude of curved surfaces further complicated by the twin rudders and there associated linkage.
Can the forum advise. Please.