z1ppy
Well-Known Member
I am not convinced this is the right move posting here but if someone else gains from our experience then it has to be worth my personal embarrassment. (sorry for the long post)
We had an impromptu weekend away with the boat this weekend. Planned to go out for lunch and ended up staying with friends and coming back the following day.
So the forecast for Sunday was not great, we got up early to a beautiful sun rise hoping to get back before the weather came in. Called the lock, no answer, phoned the duty mobile. no answer. then called again, "oh sorry sir, we dont man the marina 24 hours, first lock out will be 8.00 today)
This put us back a bit but locking out at 8.00 with very dark grey skies we set off. down to end of the river past Cowes and opened up onto the plane heading on our usual path. Wind was south westerly and 4 / 5, (we were heading for Hythe) we with little traffic, we headed across towards Calshot at a leisurely 28 kts on a route we have done hundreds of times before. Just as we were crossing the main shipping lane i felt the engine surge and splutter, immediately i could feel something was very wrong and we were down on power.
I turned 90 degrees to the shipping lane with a view to getting as far out of it as possible before the situation got worse. By the time we were roughly 200 meters west of Calshot Spit bouy we had no forward drive although the engine was still running and the alarms had not started yet. (around 30 seconds after the first sign of problem)
With the south westerly blowing, this was pretty much the bumpiest part of the Solent at the time and we were drifting fast... my first mistake, ( i hear you shouting) was considering the wind conditions, i should have attempted to head east at the first sign of trouble so to get us out of the channel and when drifting, pushing us away from the channel. Looking back now i can see thats the case but at the time, i didnt think that logically.
At that point, we were not in immediate danger, there was little in the way of leisure traffic and at that time, no commercial traffic in sight.
I called Sea Start immediately who were excellent as usual and advised that their engineer was just getting to the boat (based in Hamble) and would be dispatched immediately, i gave visual reference position at the time and offered lat and long but they were happy they would be able to find us without.
By this time i had chance to review the situation. Engine "check engine" alarm was now sounding and despite a "reboot" something was clearly not right. i tried to keep the engine in gear to give us some headway and steerage but the vibration at tickover was significant and i didn't want to cause more damage.
We were now around 5 minutes from the first sign of trouble and it was clear that within another 5 minutes we would be drifting into the shipping lane. (still no sight of commercial traffic). at this time, i felt it prudent to call Solent Coastguard on the VHF and advise them of our position and situation and whilst not requesting additional assistance at this time, situations can of course escalate very quickly.
SCG responded immediately in a professional and assured way. no reputation of questions, no asking seemingly irrelevant questions. i informed type of vessel, persons on board, current position and current drift rate, nature of problem and actions already taken. They confirmed they had Eyes on us through NCW and that they had informed VTS of our position and situation, they also confirmed they had Seastart on AIS and could see it was en route to us. they confirmed they would keep a watch on us until the situation had resolved and if we needed any further assistance to request immediately. I told them i would remain in contact with them until such time the situation was under control.
Now around 15 minutes after the first sign of trouble we were pretty much middle of the shipping lane, we could see a large gas carrier coming west past Hamble and Redjet coming North from Cowes, again, SCG confirmed that they had notified all parties and it immediately became apparent that the Gas carrier was able to turn and pass us to the west (upwind) whilst Redjet slowed considerably and passed us to the west (downwind).
We could see Sea Start in the distance and with the weather closing fast (by this time we were in heavy rain and vis down to around 2 miles (as a guess based on not being able to see the island at this time) it was a very welcome sight,
Quick tow rigged and we started making around 7 kts out of the main shipping lane.
Now at this point i need to disclose a few things.
We are a 8 meter rib with single outboard. The engine is serviced regularly by a highly reputable mechanic. i am not mechanically gifted but i do not, for one second place any blame on the engine maintenance programme.
We were two persons on board. Both with life jackets on.
We carry a Coastal flare pack on board as well as a laser flare.
Boat has a fixed VHF with plotter. We also had 2 x portable VHF and a handheld plotter.
Usually all our wet weather gear is in a dry bag on the boat. As we were only planning to be out for a few hours, we had didnt take it. (major mistake)
Throughout the entire incident the engine continued to run in idle but would not provide any drive. VHF Comms were via the fixed VHF set with aerial mounted on the A frame.
Sea start continued the tow up to Hythe at 7 Kts, took us through the lock and put us on our berth.
Speaking with the Seastart engineer as we rigged the alongside tow he was most apologetic that he had not been to us any faster, and that considering the conditions he felt he was unable to transfer SWMBO onto his boat and into the dry cabin. Something i entirely agree with and although by the time we got to Hythe, we were soaked to the skin, it was still the right decision.
When back on berth we dumped the boat and jumped in the car, fortunately we live 5 miles from the boat so we could get home to warm up. I returned to the boat to tidy up later that afternoon. engine started and provided drive in gear but with significant vibration at in gear throttle position. There is no damage to outboard leg, prop / skeg. Engineer is looking on Tuesday, we have out suspicions but until he has seen it and plugged the laptop in, we are in the dark as to what caused this...
So... what would you have done?
i appreciate i am leaving myself wide open for criticism here but as i say, if others learn something from the experience (as i have) then its worth it.
We had an impromptu weekend away with the boat this weekend. Planned to go out for lunch and ended up staying with friends and coming back the following day.
So the forecast for Sunday was not great, we got up early to a beautiful sun rise hoping to get back before the weather came in. Called the lock, no answer, phoned the duty mobile. no answer. then called again, "oh sorry sir, we dont man the marina 24 hours, first lock out will be 8.00 today)
This put us back a bit but locking out at 8.00 with very dark grey skies we set off. down to end of the river past Cowes and opened up onto the plane heading on our usual path. Wind was south westerly and 4 / 5, (we were heading for Hythe) we with little traffic, we headed across towards Calshot at a leisurely 28 kts on a route we have done hundreds of times before. Just as we were crossing the main shipping lane i felt the engine surge and splutter, immediately i could feel something was very wrong and we were down on power.
I turned 90 degrees to the shipping lane with a view to getting as far out of it as possible before the situation got worse. By the time we were roughly 200 meters west of Calshot Spit bouy we had no forward drive although the engine was still running and the alarms had not started yet. (around 30 seconds after the first sign of problem)
With the south westerly blowing, this was pretty much the bumpiest part of the Solent at the time and we were drifting fast... my first mistake, ( i hear you shouting) was considering the wind conditions, i should have attempted to head east at the first sign of trouble so to get us out of the channel and when drifting, pushing us away from the channel. Looking back now i can see thats the case but at the time, i didnt think that logically.
At that point, we were not in immediate danger, there was little in the way of leisure traffic and at that time, no commercial traffic in sight.
I called Sea Start immediately who were excellent as usual and advised that their engineer was just getting to the boat (based in Hamble) and would be dispatched immediately, i gave visual reference position at the time and offered lat and long but they were happy they would be able to find us without.
By this time i had chance to review the situation. Engine "check engine" alarm was now sounding and despite a "reboot" something was clearly not right. i tried to keep the engine in gear to give us some headway and steerage but the vibration at tickover was significant and i didn't want to cause more damage.
We were now around 5 minutes from the first sign of trouble and it was clear that within another 5 minutes we would be drifting into the shipping lane. (still no sight of commercial traffic). at this time, i felt it prudent to call Solent Coastguard on the VHF and advise them of our position and situation and whilst not requesting additional assistance at this time, situations can of course escalate very quickly.
SCG responded immediately in a professional and assured way. no reputation of questions, no asking seemingly irrelevant questions. i informed type of vessel, persons on board, current position and current drift rate, nature of problem and actions already taken. They confirmed they had Eyes on us through NCW and that they had informed VTS of our position and situation, they also confirmed they had Seastart on AIS and could see it was en route to us. they confirmed they would keep a watch on us until the situation had resolved and if we needed any further assistance to request immediately. I told them i would remain in contact with them until such time the situation was under control.
Now around 15 minutes after the first sign of trouble we were pretty much middle of the shipping lane, we could see a large gas carrier coming west past Hamble and Redjet coming North from Cowes, again, SCG confirmed that they had notified all parties and it immediately became apparent that the Gas carrier was able to turn and pass us to the west (upwind) whilst Redjet slowed considerably and passed us to the west (downwind).
We could see Sea Start in the distance and with the weather closing fast (by this time we were in heavy rain and vis down to around 2 miles (as a guess based on not being able to see the island at this time) it was a very welcome sight,
Quick tow rigged and we started making around 7 kts out of the main shipping lane.
Now at this point i need to disclose a few things.
We are a 8 meter rib with single outboard. The engine is serviced regularly by a highly reputable mechanic. i am not mechanically gifted but i do not, for one second place any blame on the engine maintenance programme.
We were two persons on board. Both with life jackets on.
We carry a Coastal flare pack on board as well as a laser flare.
Boat has a fixed VHF with plotter. We also had 2 x portable VHF and a handheld plotter.
Usually all our wet weather gear is in a dry bag on the boat. As we were only planning to be out for a few hours, we had didnt take it. (major mistake)
Throughout the entire incident the engine continued to run in idle but would not provide any drive. VHF Comms were via the fixed VHF set with aerial mounted on the A frame.
Sea start continued the tow up to Hythe at 7 Kts, took us through the lock and put us on our berth.
Speaking with the Seastart engineer as we rigged the alongside tow he was most apologetic that he had not been to us any faster, and that considering the conditions he felt he was unable to transfer SWMBO onto his boat and into the dry cabin. Something i entirely agree with and although by the time we got to Hythe, we were soaked to the skin, it was still the right decision.
When back on berth we dumped the boat and jumped in the car, fortunately we live 5 miles from the boat so we could get home to warm up. I returned to the boat to tidy up later that afternoon. engine started and provided drive in gear but with significant vibration at in gear throttle position. There is no damage to outboard leg, prop / skeg. Engineer is looking on Tuesday, we have out suspicions but until he has seen it and plugged the laptop in, we are in the dark as to what caused this...
So... what would you have done?
i appreciate i am leaving myself wide open for criticism here but as i say, if others learn something from the experience (as i have) then its worth it.