AdrianPetts
Member
Pour a can of Coca Cola down the drain and leave for 24hrs. Always freed my very stiff rudder on a boat I used to own.
Just to recap further to vyv_cox's comment, I'm concerned about the seacock material if it's brass. If it's simply a matter of unscrewing the seacock and rescrewing in a replacement that seems like the sensible thing to do. What I'm less keen on is tampering with the skin fitting as that seems a little more challenging (for the likes of me). While I'm at it I might as well upgrade the hose to a reinforced version as advised by Andrew G. Any further advice on what's required in terms of the process of replacement would be really useful.
I'll now need to understand what needs replacing. Is it the seacock and the skin fitting, or is it just a matter of unscrewing the seacock and rescrewing on a replacement?
Much easier if he is going to do as suggested and change the skin fitting to grind off the outside flange and pull the whole lot out from inside the boat. Much less swearing and bruised knuckles!Folks. The OP in #20 has acknowledged our suggestions and is going to remove it - but how? My quick list is:
. Cut the crapy solid hose with a very sharp knife about 60mm from its end (you can remove and discard the jubilee clip -you'll be replacing that WITH TWO).
. With one spanner hold the nut holding the skin fitting (you don't want either to turn) you will be pushing the spanner R to L (clockwise).
. With another spanner located on the hexagonal at the top of the ball valve turn the ball valve, spanner L to R (anti clockwise) without the skin fitting or it's nut turning.
. After a turn or so it should turn off by hand.
. You'll need to inspect the skin fitting and seacock to see if they should be replaced (as I suggested in #17 I would).
. To remove the skin fitting turn the spanner on the nut L to R. If the fitting turns there may be slots in it that an outside person can hold with two screwdrivers to stop it turning. Failing that multigrips or even a pipe wrench on the thread but don't be too brutal.
OK? Andrew
-you'll be replacing that WITH TWO).
Why? Yet another old wives theory that doesn't hold waterD) when examined sensibly. How many people have witnesses a hose coming off their skin fittings because there was only one clip on it? There must be billions of hose clips around the world, holding huge pressures by comparison with a few inches head of water, and they don't fail. I have heard of far more cases of the fitting snapping due to dezincification than I have of hoses inadvertently coming off hose tails.
Not at all sure about your wild guesses though. I can count at least 12 on my engine, none of them doubled up, with an internal pressure of 12 psi. None of them have ever fallen off, nor the ones on the many cars I have owned. The only hose failures I have ever had were in the hose itself near to the hose clip, in each case the result of old age and fatigue. Two clips would not have helped at all.If the chance of the boat sinking from a single hose failing and falling off or a loose object knocking the hose off is 1 per 100,000 boats per year (wild guess) then what is it with two? 1 per 10,000,000,000. A huge improvement for little cost.
If you are out the water then remove it and get a new one, DZR is the metal, or even better Gunmetal, just hold the skin fitting with stilson and unscrew the valve.
http://www.cranefs.com/files/uploads/file/DZR Ball Valve Brochure- CFS.pdf
Having tried to remove hoses, I'm not even sure if one is necessaryWhy? Yet another old wives theory that doesn't hold waterD) when examined sensibly. How many people have witnesses a hose coming off their skin fittings because there was only one clip on it? ...
Not at all sure about your wild guesses though. I can count at least 12 on my engine, none of them doubled up, with an internal pressure of 12 psi. None of them have ever fallen off, nor the ones on the many cars I have owned. The only hose failures I have ever had were in the hose itself near to the hose clip, in each case the result of old age and fatigue. Two clips would not have helped at all.
I think a hose clip is a remarkably successful idea that works perfectly in billions of applications. So if the odds against accidental loss when used singly are 1:1,000,000,000 in all applications, how much can doubling up add? Statistically not measurable.
Having tried to remove hoses, I'm not even sure if one is necessary![]()
Yes..... the one place where I would thoroughly recommend two either side is with the stern gland.
A few weeks after purchasing my Twister years ago, I was having a day sail/motor with a pal as crew and he suddenly noticed
water over the sole in the saloon.
We were motoring away with the stern gland having come away from one end.
Happily I have always carried a comprehensive tool kit and I was in those days flexible enough. with my slight frame. to hang
upside down behind the engine to pull the whole lot together again whilst crew pumped the bilges like mad.
S.