My C&C 35 MKII has 7 Groco bronze seacocks, each one placed in a very hard
to reach space.since it is well known to be good seamanship to close all
seacocks when leaving the boat I wonder why the designers did not make them
a little more easily accessible and with longer handles too.I might be more
inclined to use them if they were more accessible.however all 7 do move
freely open to close, the surveyor confirmed that just last week

 

  _____  

From: CnC-List [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Jim Watts
via CnC-List
Sent: May 26, 2014 2:07 AM
To: M Bod; 1 CnC List
Subject: Re: Stus-List First sail

 

Either leave the engine seacock open, or hang the ignition key off the
seacock handle. Me, I'm useless and we have a Yanmar, so I can start the
engine with pretty much anything I have in my pocket including lint. I leave
the seacock open. I know this makes me a bad person and I can live with
that. 




Jim Watts
Paradigm Shift
C&C 35 Mk III
Victoria, BC

 

On 25 May 2014 20:13, M Bod via CnC-List <[email protected]> wrote:


OK. Boat got off the dock today. After a bunch of engine work, new hoses and
new fuel tank (all installed by mechanic) everything is supposed to be
working smoothly.

Well. Getting off the dock was not so smooth. Couldn't sort out why roller
furler was jamming for a bit.
Finally sorted the issue, started the engine, made sure all looked good
(exhaust a little louder than I expected, but not bad).

Off we went (had a friend along to assist moving the boat from the marina to
a nearby cove where it can stay an extra week).

10 min out I see some smoke riding through the companion way. Throttle down.
Full off engine cowling. Coolant everywhere! Must have a leak.

We turn around to limp back to the dock. I'm looking at the mess with the
coolant boiling over when I realize (OK remember mechanic warned me) the
seacock for the engine is CLOSED!!!

Opened the seacock.  Everything cooled off. We had burned off much of our
coolant - so I poured in a 1/2 litre water bottle. Kept the engine at low
rpm and made the run to the cove.

Little hitch at the end.  Went to furl the jib but too much sail and not
enough line on the furling drum. Only managed to pack away 2/3 of the sail.
Solved that by doing 10 clockwise circles in the bay to wrap the sail around
the forestay! Dirty, but it worked.
All told we survived. Feel like a royal idiot for forgetting the seacock.
Had pretty good water shooting out of the muffler after - but I figure I
better pull the impellor and check/replace it anyway.

I had checked the exhaust when we started - saw splashes. But later realized
I was looking at the air exhaust hitting the water and causing a little
splash.

Still a little shell shocked from the experience but thinking I'll likely
remember the seacock in the future!!!!!

Mark
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