sighmoon
Well-Known Member
After motoring through the night and running down the fuel tank to about 1/4 full - lower than I'd let it fall before, the engine refused to start. I duly took off the fuel filter and had a look, and it was full of brown liquid, which didn't particularly smell of diesel, and leaving it to settle overnight, I reckon the tank must have contained about 2% diesel and 98% water.
We pumped it out, and there was about 3 bucketfulls of the liquid.
Where could the water have come from? It's a lot for a winter's worth of condensation, and there had been no problems at all when the boat was last used (last year). We'd had a bit of water over the decks, but the rubber on the deck filler cap was still soft and seems like a good seal to me. The yard we overwintered at had filled the water and diesel tanks for me, and I'm left wondering if a numpty at the marina may have put the wrong hose in the wrong hole, and kept quiet about it. Could there be any other explanation?
The water seems to have stuffed one of the injectors, so the saga isn't over.
Thankfully, this happened alongside a pontoon, shared with knowledgable and helpful motor boaters who dived in and sorted out what was what.
We pumped it out, and there was about 3 bucketfulls of the liquid.
Where could the water have come from? It's a lot for a winter's worth of condensation, and there had been no problems at all when the boat was last used (last year). We'd had a bit of water over the decks, but the rubber on the deck filler cap was still soft and seems like a good seal to me. The yard we overwintered at had filled the water and diesel tanks for me, and I'm left wondering if a numpty at the marina may have put the wrong hose in the wrong hole, and kept quiet about it. Could there be any other explanation?
The water seems to have stuffed one of the injectors, so the saga isn't over.
Thankfully, this happened alongside a pontoon, shared with knowledgable and helpful motor boaters who dived in and sorted out what was what.