mickbond
Well-Known Member
Last year I replaced my Volvo Shaft
with a Radice seal. The new seal has a vent pipe that removes the need to burp the seal. This pipe is taken above the water line ( in case 20" above) and vents off any air. The seal has been a complete success or so I thought. Yesterday when in a Dutch lock I had reason to go from slow ahead to full astern rather quickly
All was well but on checking the bilge later there was a quantity of clean sea water in the normally dry bilge. I couldn't find the reason at all. After much investigation I found some salty deposits on the end of the vent pipe. What had happened was that with the boat moving forward, when full reverse was applied the force of water from the propeller had pushed water up through the vent pipe and into the bilge. I fastened the boat tightly to the pontoon selected full reverse and hey presto water came flooding out of the vent pipe. As this is something I never do I've never noticed it. On full reverse when not fastened to the pontoon the water stops being forced up the pipe as soon ad the boat starts making way and do only a small amount enters. I have plugged the pipe with a wine bottle cork to prevent this happening again, as once the boat is in the water it shouldn't need burping until it is hauled out. Permanent solutions are to feed the seal with water from the cooling system as recommended for high speed craft ( of which mine definitely isn't) or try raising the level of the vent pipe to see if the head of water the prop can generate is less than the height I can make the vent.
Any comments?
with a Radice seal. The new seal has a vent pipe that removes the need to burp the seal. This pipe is taken above the water line ( in case 20" above) and vents off any air. The seal has been a complete success or so I thought. Yesterday when in a Dutch lock I had reason to go from slow ahead to full astern rather quickly
All was well but on checking the bilge later there was a quantity of clean sea water in the normally dry bilge. I couldn't find the reason at all. After much investigation I found some salty deposits on the end of the vent pipe. What had happened was that with the boat moving forward, when full reverse was applied the force of water from the propeller had pushed water up through the vent pipe and into the bilge. I fastened the boat tightly to the pontoon selected full reverse and hey presto water came flooding out of the vent pipe. As this is something I never do I've never noticed it. On full reverse when not fastened to the pontoon the water stops being forced up the pipe as soon ad the boat starts making way and do only a small amount enters. I have plugged the pipe with a wine bottle cork to prevent this happening again, as once the boat is in the water it shouldn't need burping until it is hauled out. Permanent solutions are to feed the seal with water from the cooling system as recommended for high speed craft ( of which mine definitely isn't) or try raising the level of the vent pipe to see if the head of water the prop can generate is less than the height I can make the vent.
Any comments?