Neeves
Well-Known Member
I wondered how often members serviced their windlass - took the gear box off, opened it up, checked for water leaks, refilled with new oil, checked shaft, checked wear on gypsy teeth, check bolt corrosion etc.
I know what the user manuals say - I wondered what the reality was - or is it out of sight out of mind?
My very limited experience is that the water seals can fail, allowing water and worse to enter the gear box with inevitable corrosion of the internals of the gear box. Why the seals fail ?- possibly straining the windlass by using it to take the load on the anchor chain, when power setting, retrieving without aid from the yacht motor and an absence of use of a snubber or chain lock. Or do the electric motors fail first - and people simply dump the lot and start anew.
I have read that loading the gearbox, unnecessarily might bend the shafts, seems most unlikely looking at the shafts of most windlass (more likely to pull the windlass off the deck!) but the seals appear a weak point (but they receive little mention). Motors also seem a weak point as windlass that have been installed for any length of time seem to show considerable corrosion of the motor casing.
When we removed an old windlass one thing we found was there is a lot of aluminium in windlass held together with stainless bolts (that are not isolated from the aluminium). The only way to remove in the end was to use an angle grinder. When we installed the new windlass we carefully isolated all the stainless from the alloy (though whether in the long term that will work - remains to be seen). We also found, this was an obvious one, that the motor was too near the fall of the chain, increasing chance of corrosion and I saw one new yacht, at a boat show, where the fall of the chain actually rubbed on the electric motor casing. (motors can be located anywhere on the 'radius of the shaft' - commonly the motor is located convenient for the cabling, not the fall of the chain).
Jonathan
edit New windlass, maybe lots of old ones, have sight glasses in the gear box to allow oil inspection. Do people find they are located such that they are useful. On ours, great though the idea is, you would need to be a contortionist, have a small head, or maybe use on of those cameras on an umbilical chord to access. close edit
I know what the user manuals say - I wondered what the reality was - or is it out of sight out of mind?
My very limited experience is that the water seals can fail, allowing water and worse to enter the gear box with inevitable corrosion of the internals of the gear box. Why the seals fail ?- possibly straining the windlass by using it to take the load on the anchor chain, when power setting, retrieving without aid from the yacht motor and an absence of use of a snubber or chain lock. Or do the electric motors fail first - and people simply dump the lot and start anew.
I have read that loading the gearbox, unnecessarily might bend the shafts, seems most unlikely looking at the shafts of most windlass (more likely to pull the windlass off the deck!) but the seals appear a weak point (but they receive little mention). Motors also seem a weak point as windlass that have been installed for any length of time seem to show considerable corrosion of the motor casing.
When we removed an old windlass one thing we found was there is a lot of aluminium in windlass held together with stainless bolts (that are not isolated from the aluminium). The only way to remove in the end was to use an angle grinder. When we installed the new windlass we carefully isolated all the stainless from the alloy (though whether in the long term that will work - remains to be seen). We also found, this was an obvious one, that the motor was too near the fall of the chain, increasing chance of corrosion and I saw one new yacht, at a boat show, where the fall of the chain actually rubbed on the electric motor casing. (motors can be located anywhere on the 'radius of the shaft' - commonly the motor is located convenient for the cabling, not the fall of the chain).
Jonathan
edit New windlass, maybe lots of old ones, have sight glasses in the gear box to allow oil inspection. Do people find they are located such that they are useful. On ours, great though the idea is, you would need to be a contortionist, have a small head, or maybe use on of those cameras on an umbilical chord to access. close edit
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