sj8070
Active Member
Hi all
Cheers for help so far, particularly on these threads, in helping us choose our first boat and navigate the buying process:
http://www.ybw.com/forums/showthread.php?478650-Deposit-down-now-the-admin-starts!
http://www.ybw.com/forums/showthread.php?478306-Is-this-a-good-deal-Regal-2250
The surveys in Littlehampton (Sussex Boat Shop) all went well, particularly the structural survey.
The sea trial was very impressive - about 2 miles with her flat out, turbos kicking in when they should, water temperatures and oil pressures behaving
Our engineer (Adrian Cronk) noticed gear box oil in the UJ bellows leaking from the input seal... we knocked £400 off asking price to have this fixed
He also recommended a full service, particularly to the inaccessible fuel filters which looked very old.
Unfortunately we opted not to do this, opting to get the boat moved to Barcelona ASAP to bed into the marina for a holiday upcoming on 17th june
As you can see from pics below, the launch went without incident and the boat was nicely on plane for c.5 minutes before the starboard engine 'cut out' (revs dropped to zero)
Starboard engine then wouldn't start
At this point i cut the power to the port engine to return to the marina in forward tick
But the port engine began overheating rapidly, and the alarm set off (temp c.220F)
We drifted for a bit allowing the engine to cool, then managed to return and moor with port engine just at the 200F cusp, the occasional alarm..
A pretty disappointing start!
Fortunately the marina (Port Forum) had a reasonably sensible marine engineer on hand who helped us diagnose the problems
ENGINE PROBLEMS
Starboard engine seemed to be a fuel issue... so checked the bowls in the filters (that we could see) and no obvious water
Also checked that fuel was reaching the cylinders which it seemed to be (by loosening the nuts on top of them) - apologies for lack of correct terminology
At this point the engineer suspected it was air in the fuel... So he had me turn the engine over whilst (i believe) he attempted to 'bleed' the engine of air again turning one of the nuts on top of the engine.
This got it started again and running fine with lots of throttle in neutral (good 15 mins)
A little suspicious given the problem-free sea trial, I then asked if this was likely to fix the problem permanently (i.e. air had gotten in in transit perhaps?) or whether it was likely that air would continue to seep into the fuel system. He said he thought it was the former
We assumed that the port engine was overheating because of initial stress with just 1 engine running, having checked both the internal water was present and seemed ok, as well as that the raw water was pumping (opened the lid and it spurted out when the engine was turned over)
Both of the above assumptions appeared very naive when we had exactly the same problem when leaving the marina for the 2nd time, just in reverse
The port engine overheated first, and i put it in neutral to run with the starboard (which had no problems cooling itself running at decent revs)
However, after another couple of minutes we lost power to the starboard in exactly the same fashion as before
So to summarise, it appears:
- The starboard engine still has air entering the fuel, unless problem misdiagnosed in the first place or a new problem has occurred
- The port engine is having problems with cooling
Do we think this is very suspicious given a near perfect sea trial?
Or do these things happen when you tow a 30yr old engine for 20 hours?
Thoughts on possible solutions to the two issues greatly appreciated
Clearly we are very disappointed, but determined to solider on!
To those who said spend £25k on a newer boat/engine feel free to say I told you so!


Cheers for help so far, particularly on these threads, in helping us choose our first boat and navigate the buying process:
http://www.ybw.com/forums/showthread.php?478650-Deposit-down-now-the-admin-starts!
http://www.ybw.com/forums/showthread.php?478306-Is-this-a-good-deal-Regal-2250
The surveys in Littlehampton (Sussex Boat Shop) all went well, particularly the structural survey.
The sea trial was very impressive - about 2 miles with her flat out, turbos kicking in when they should, water temperatures and oil pressures behaving
Our engineer (Adrian Cronk) noticed gear box oil in the UJ bellows leaking from the input seal... we knocked £400 off asking price to have this fixed
He also recommended a full service, particularly to the inaccessible fuel filters which looked very old.
Unfortunately we opted not to do this, opting to get the boat moved to Barcelona ASAP to bed into the marina for a holiday upcoming on 17th june
As you can see from pics below, the launch went without incident and the boat was nicely on plane for c.5 minutes before the starboard engine 'cut out' (revs dropped to zero)
Starboard engine then wouldn't start
At this point i cut the power to the port engine to return to the marina in forward tick
But the port engine began overheating rapidly, and the alarm set off (temp c.220F)
We drifted for a bit allowing the engine to cool, then managed to return and moor with port engine just at the 200F cusp, the occasional alarm..
A pretty disappointing start!
Fortunately the marina (Port Forum) had a reasonably sensible marine engineer on hand who helped us diagnose the problems
ENGINE PROBLEMS
Starboard engine seemed to be a fuel issue... so checked the bowls in the filters (that we could see) and no obvious water
Also checked that fuel was reaching the cylinders which it seemed to be (by loosening the nuts on top of them) - apologies for lack of correct terminology
At this point the engineer suspected it was air in the fuel... So he had me turn the engine over whilst (i believe) he attempted to 'bleed' the engine of air again turning one of the nuts on top of the engine.
This got it started again and running fine with lots of throttle in neutral (good 15 mins)
A little suspicious given the problem-free sea trial, I then asked if this was likely to fix the problem permanently (i.e. air had gotten in in transit perhaps?) or whether it was likely that air would continue to seep into the fuel system. He said he thought it was the former
We assumed that the port engine was overheating because of initial stress with just 1 engine running, having checked both the internal water was present and seemed ok, as well as that the raw water was pumping (opened the lid and it spurted out when the engine was turned over)
Both of the above assumptions appeared very naive when we had exactly the same problem when leaving the marina for the 2nd time, just in reverse
The port engine overheated first, and i put it in neutral to run with the starboard (which had no problems cooling itself running at decent revs)
However, after another couple of minutes we lost power to the starboard in exactly the same fashion as before
So to summarise, it appears:
- The starboard engine still has air entering the fuel, unless problem misdiagnosed in the first place or a new problem has occurred
- The port engine is having problems with cooling
Do we think this is very suspicious given a near perfect sea trial?
Or do these things happen when you tow a 30yr old engine for 20 hours?
Thoughts on possible solutions to the two issues greatly appreciated
Clearly we are very disappointed, but determined to solider on!
To those who said spend £25k on a newer boat/engine feel free to say I told you so!

