A good friend of mine lost his year-old impeller on the way out of the harbor 
this summer, which generated a lot of discussion on the boat I race on. Of the 
three boat owners on the crew, two change impellers every spring and one 
changes them every 3-5 years. We all moor in the Chicago harbor system, and all 
motor about the same amount. The boats spend half the year in the water and 
half on the hard, and the one failure this summer was the only failure any of 
us have ever had. The local C&C dealer and the yards where we store all 
recommend an annual change, but I think that this year I'm also going to change 
out the spare I carry, which has never seen service and is now over 5 years 
old.  As Jack says, it's just a few dollars to change this stuff, and the 
penalty for a failure is grief. (BTW, in his attempt to fish all the broken 
bits of the impeller out my friend managed to lose some in places he couldn't 
get to, resulting in calling in a mechanic to set things right. Grief, time 
lost from sailing, and money.)

From: CnC-List [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of 
[email protected]
Sent: Friday, October 19, 2012 8:27 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: Stus-List Miscellaneous -impeller

Spend a few bucks and change the impeller with each annual service, the few 
dollars that it cost will save you grief & money in the end. A senior Yanmar 
factory tech told me that after a year of two the rubber blades on the impeller 
will "set" and will decrease in efficiency due to fatigue in the rubber, the 
blades may not indicate cracks but you can bet they they have lost some 
flexibility. The Yanmar guy is a good friend & was not trying to me impellers, 
just offering good advice....

The choice is yours, but if you want go longer than 2 years you may want buy a 
Sea Tow package...

Jack Fitzgerald
HONEY
C&C 39 TM
Savannah, GA

In a message dated 10/19/2012 9:16:36 A.M. Eastern Daylight Time, 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> writes:
I don't have the experience of Rich but I would also lean in that direction.  
I've changed mine for the first time this summer after 3 years.  The impeller 
looked in perfect condition (no cracks and blades were as flexible as a new 
one).  I kept the old one as a spare and now feel confident that I will only 
inspect the impeller every spring.

I've been told by a mechanic that if the raw water circuit is winterized using 
antifreeze (vs. drained), the impeller holds up very well.  Since our impeller 
spends more than half the year in antifreeze, this might explain the durability!

I also reasoned that since we sail on a lake with no commercial traffic and 
never solo there is little risk in case I have to face an impeller break down: 
I have a spare and tools on board, I know how to swap them.

Sébastien Lemieux
Merlot X - C&C 30 mk2 1987
Mooney Bay - Lake Champlain


On Oct 18, 2012, at 21:28, Rich Knowles wrote:


I check mine each season's end when I winterize. If it looks good, it goes back 
in. I have installed one new one in 15 years and that includes several runs of 
a few minutes each year without water. They are pretty durable. I check for 
cracking.

Rich Knowles
Indigo. LF38
Halifax

On 2012-10-18, at 22:04, Martin DeYoung 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:

...how often do you guys change the impeller in the raw water
pump?

I change Calypso's 4-108 raw water impeller at the start of each season then 
put the lightly used old one in the spares box.  It is also my practice to 
check the impeller prior to setting off on a longer trip where a sudden loss of 
cooling might be inconvenient.

There has been a year or so where I did not change the impeller in the spring 
and the impeller perform fine with no significant change in appearance.

I change the impeller after each time I forget to open the raw water inlet thru 
hull valve and allowed the engine to run without cooling water for more than a 
few minutes.

Martin
Calypso
1970 C&C 43
Seattle

-----Original Message-----
From: CnC-List [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Robert Abbott
Sent: Thursday, October 18, 2012 5:24 PM
To: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
Subject: Stus-List Miscellaneous

Because of excessive mussel growth on my prop and prop shaft the past
several seasons, this past Spring I tried something new, namely applying
"lanolin" to them....boat was hauled this week and I can report that the
lanolin was not very effective.....there were approx. 3 dozen mussels
attached to the prop and the prop shaft was covered as well.

On another note, applied Micron 66 antifouling paint to the boat this
past Spring (have been using Micron CSC for over 12
years).....absolutely no growth of any kind....and specifically no
'slime' which is common with the CSC.....the bottom looks like it did
when it was painted in the Spring and I only applied a very light coat
of the '66' (actually diluted it approx. 10%)....it is incredible
antifouling paint.....only regret is that it is not sold in Canada.

And, after 7 sailing seasons, I decided  to check the air filter on the
Yanmar 2GMF.....took the cover off to discover there was no 'actual
filter' in the metal casing...ooops!  There will be by next Spring.

Lastly, how often do you guys changedthe impeller in the raw water
pump?  Not what the specs recommend but actually how often.....every
year, 2 years, 5 years, 10 years?

Bob Abbott
AZURA
C&C 32 - 84
Halifax, N.S.


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