I was looking at a 1975 C27 (I mentioned in a previous communication I am 
looking to buy one in the LA area) which I think had the original keel bolts. 
They looked to be pretty rusty. Is it possible that salt water could seep in if 
these bolts are rusted enough?
Steve


----- Original Message ----
From: Philip J Agur <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Monday, June 9, 2008 8:51:30 AM
Subject: Re: catalina27-talk: re: bad bilge pump


Not really. It's common but you should really know where the water is coming 
from before you get too comfortable with it. The water in the bilge came from 
somewhere. 
 
The bilge is the shower sump on Wing Tip so we wind up with water from shower 
occasionally, but in between I've seen the bilge get dusty and she's an inboard 
with a high tech shaft seal.
 
The most important thing to determine is that you don't have wood getting soggy 
somewhere. 
 
Phil Agur                     s/v Wing Tip
Secretary,                    Call Sign WCW3485
IC27/270A                   MMSI 366901790 
www.catalina27.org    Vessel Doc# 1039809
----- Original Message ----- 
From: Steve Siefken 
To: [email protected] 
Sent: Monday, June 09, 2008 8:21 AM
Subject: Re: catalina27-talk: re: bad bilge pump

Is it normal to have some water in the bilge even if there is an outboard 
engine? I used to have a Catalina 25 (outboard) where the bilge never had a 
drop of water in it for the 4 years I had her.
 
Thanks,
 
Steve



----- Original Message ----
From: "[EMAIL PROTECTED]" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [email protected]
Sent: Monday, June 9, 2008 8:02:01 AM
Subject: catalina27-talk: re: bad bilge pump


I couldn't find any in-line fuse for the bilge pump so it is presumably using 
the control panel fuse only.
 
I cut the wires between the pump and the float switch and temporarily wired the 
pump only.  When I turned on the panel switch, the pump started running. So, 
apparently there is a short or problem with the float.  I will check that out 
tonight/tomorrow between major thunderstorms.
 
What can go wrong with a float switch? I can think of two things right off the 
bat: 1) connections are bad/corroded, etc. or 2) contact isn't being made when 
the float lifts.  Other ideas, and, should I just outright replace the float 
switch?
 
What is the best way to make wire connections in the bilge area - heat-shrink 
wrap?
 
Bob Mann



      

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