nickrj
Well-Known Member
Firstly, Happy New Year!
You all have sort of become my little collaborative shorecrew, and I must say, everyones advice over the last year has been absolutely invaluable. I am readying to leave continental Europe now, but I have one more pressing issue to try and solve, which I hope isn't too much to ask.
In 1972, my boat was born without a cockpit drain. If she was born in 1973, I would not be making this post, because the issue was solved.
The problem stems from the cockpit floor being below the waterline. I tried to fix this already with a 1 1/2in seacock four inches above the cockpit floor, piped into a seacock on the waterline. This was a ridiculous attempt at solving the issue, and clearly shows I am not a shipwright, and also shows I may have a below-average IQ.
Jeremy Rogers recommends I should haul the boat out, and place a sea cock in the bilge, just in front of the engine, and run a pipe up to my drain outlet in the cockpit. This is a great idea, and would solve the problem, but I can't work on my own boat in the marina here and must hire an 'engineer' (hello, I don't sail a 7.7metre boat because I have cash in the bank...). If you're interested in hearing my quote to drill a sea cock in, plus haul in haul out, it's 350euros + VAT. That's my entire provisioning budget!
Now, obviously this is a really big problem. But can anyone think of any innovative solutions? One particular one, whether it is good or bad I haven't really decided, is to actually pipe the drain into the raw water inlet of the engine! I think thats some interesting lateral thinking, and in the vein of what I'm asking: Have you seen this issue solved to a reasonable level of safety without hauling the boat out?
Sorry for the long post...
nick
You all have sort of become my little collaborative shorecrew, and I must say, everyones advice over the last year has been absolutely invaluable. I am readying to leave continental Europe now, but I have one more pressing issue to try and solve, which I hope isn't too much to ask.
In 1972, my boat was born without a cockpit drain. If she was born in 1973, I would not be making this post, because the issue was solved.
The problem stems from the cockpit floor being below the waterline. I tried to fix this already with a 1 1/2in seacock four inches above the cockpit floor, piped into a seacock on the waterline. This was a ridiculous attempt at solving the issue, and clearly shows I am not a shipwright, and also shows I may have a below-average IQ.
Jeremy Rogers recommends I should haul the boat out, and place a sea cock in the bilge, just in front of the engine, and run a pipe up to my drain outlet in the cockpit. This is a great idea, and would solve the problem, but I can't work on my own boat in the marina here and must hire an 'engineer' (hello, I don't sail a 7.7metre boat because I have cash in the bank...). If you're interested in hearing my quote to drill a sea cock in, plus haul in haul out, it's 350euros + VAT. That's my entire provisioning budget!
Now, obviously this is a really big problem. But can anyone think of any innovative solutions? One particular one, whether it is good or bad I haven't really decided, is to actually pipe the drain into the raw water inlet of the engine! I think thats some interesting lateral thinking, and in the vein of what I'm asking: Have you seen this issue solved to a reasonable level of safety without hauling the boat out?
Sorry for the long post...
nick