AndyL
Well-Known Member
Any ideas why the vent pipe might be dripping (when motoring)? It's well above the waterline right under the cockpit seating. Boat is a Marcon Cutlass 27 with a Yanmar 2YM15. Should I simply stick a cork in it?
This is what the website says:Any ideas why the vent pipe might be dripping (when motoring)? It's well above the waterline right under the cockpit seating. Boat is a Marcon Cutlass 27 with a Yanmar 2YM15. Should I simply stick a cork in it?
Any ideas why the vent pipe might be dripping (when motoring)? It's well above the waterline right under the cockpit seating. Boat is a Marcon Cutlass 27 with a Yanmar 2YM15. Should I simply stick a cork in it?
Not sure if this is the best advice. My PSS has been great over the last 3 years. The manufacturers advice about speeds in excess of 12 knots requiring a water supply is presumably because at that speed there may be insufficient water at the seal back even if there is no restrictive bearing. Yes I can imagine that, in your set up, 'burping' works. I wouldn't recommend that it is ok for everyone's set up though.An open vent for a PSS seal on a typical sailing vessel is not essential.. Mine ran for 20+ years and 100s of hours of motoring with no vent or piped water supply.
During that time a bellows and an SS shaft rotor were replaced, but the original carbon seal remained in use.
The only attention it had was burping by pulling back the bellows when launching at the start of the season.
If a shaft bearing prevents water access to the seal, then a piped water feed might be necessary. That is a main purpose of the tube attachment.