Barnacle Bill
Well-Known Member
I was moving the yacht back down the river from the boatyard in New Ross to its permanent berth (Waterford). Everything went OK, and we tied up, plugged in the shore line, turned on the dehumidifier, tidied up and had a cup of tea.
While we were waiting for our lift to arrive (to get back to my car), I was out on the pontoon and my son called from the boat "Dad - the dehumidifier just went bang. I unplugged it." I went back on board to have a look, and sure enough there was a nasty smell and thin white fumes coming out of it, so I lifted it off the boat and put it on the pontoon. I was wondering what had happened, and what to do next, when I noticed the smoke increasing - and looking blacker. It was clear the thing was on fire. So I did the obvious thing - lowered it into the water by it's power lead (flames were coming out at this stage) and made sure it was completely submerged before hauling it back up and putting it by the rubbish bins.
I've used that dehumidifier (and others before it) on my boat for years, because they keep the interior dry and fresh. Specifically I ran it from about October to February this year, before I took the yacht to the yard. Then within an hour of running it on our return - and it seemed perfectly normal - this happened. If our lift had arrived sooner, it would have gone on fire on the unattended yacht, and almost certainly destroyed it.
While we were waiting for our lift to arrive (to get back to my car), I was out on the pontoon and my son called from the boat "Dad - the dehumidifier just went bang. I unplugged it." I went back on board to have a look, and sure enough there was a nasty smell and thin white fumes coming out of it, so I lifted it off the boat and put it on the pontoon. I was wondering what had happened, and what to do next, when I noticed the smoke increasing - and looking blacker. It was clear the thing was on fire. So I did the obvious thing - lowered it into the water by it's power lead (flames were coming out at this stage) and made sure it was completely submerged before hauling it back up and putting it by the rubbish bins.
I've used that dehumidifier (and others before it) on my boat for years, because they keep the interior dry and fresh. Specifically I ran it from about October to February this year, before I took the yacht to the yard. Then within an hour of running it on our return - and it seemed perfectly normal - this happened. If our lift had arrived sooner, it would have gone on fire on the unattended yacht, and almost certainly destroyed it.


