Stus-List Re: Crazy hurricane thing

2020-11-08 Thread Bill Coleman
And it’s not over!!

 

Bill Coleman

Entrada, Erie, PA

 

 

 

From: Randy Stafford via CnC-List [mailto:cnc-list@cnc-list.com] 
Sent: Sunday, November 08, 2020 1:26 PM
To: Stus-List
Cc: Randy Stafford
Subject: Stus-List Re: Crazy hurricane thing

 

Oh the stories you will tell, Dennis.  Glad to hear Touche is home safe.  What 
a crazy summer for you!

 

Cheers,

Randy





On Nov 7, 2020, at 4:03 PM, Dennis C.  wrote:

 

When we splashed Touche' after the Hurricane Sally repairs, we noticed a 
strange thing.  When we fired up the air conditioner, the cooling water was 
much reduced from normal.  I have a tee in the line and an adaptor to attach a 
dock hose.  I also have a valve on the discharge thru hull.

 

I attached the dock hose, closed the discharge valve and blasted the line 
upstream through the inlet.  I then closed the inlet valve, opened the 
discharge valve and blasted downstream.  Afterwards, the flow was much improved.

 

That got us wondering about the rest of the drains, scuppers, etc.  Sure 
enough, the head sink drain was completely plugged.  Amazing that, in a marina, 
the boat moved enough that the stuff could "pump" its way onto the counter.  We 
blew it out with dock water pressure.  See the picture linked below.

 

https://drive.google.com/file/d/1cf0QdaiP1rqt-LYtH2Yb2Pft-8w0lMuA/view?usp=sharing

 

The galley sink drain was also plugged and required disassembly to clear.  We 
blew out the cockpit scuppers.

 

After some head scratching, we decided the pluggage was vegetative debris which 
somehow entered the thruhulls during the storm, floated on top of the water 
columns and then agglomerated once things calmed down.  Yes, all the thru hull 
valves were open.

 

Only the drains which were open to the atmosphere were affected.  Those that 
had configurations that prevented free flow, the engine intake and head intake 
were not affected.

 

Just a crazy hurricane thing.

 

Touche' is back in Louisiana now safe and secure in its home slip in Mandeville.

30°20'59.29"N  90° 3'14.42"W

-- 

Dennis C.

Touche' 35-1 #83

Mandeville, LA

October is the time to show your appreciation with a small contribution to this 
list to help offset the costs. If you want to support the list - use PayPal to 
send contribution --   https://www.paypal.me/stumurray  Thanks - Stu

 

October is the time to show your appreciation with a small contribution to this 
list to help offset the costs. If you want to support the list - use PayPal to 
send contribution --   https://www.paypal.me/stumurray  Thanks - Stu

Stus-List Re: Crazy hurricane thing

2020-11-08 Thread Randy Stafford via CnC-List
Oh the stories you will tell, Dennis.  Glad to hear Touche is home safe.  What 
a crazy summer for you!

Cheers,
Randy

> On Nov 7, 2020, at 4:03 PM, Dennis C.  wrote:
> 
> When we splashed Touche' after the Hurricane Sally repairs, we noticed a 
> strange thing.  When we fired up the air conditioner, the cooling water was 
> much reduced from normal.  I have a tee in the line and an adaptor to attach 
> a dock hose.  I also have a valve on the discharge thru hull.
> 
> I attached the dock hose, closed the discharge valve and blasted the line 
> upstream through the inlet.  I then closed the inlet valve, opened the 
> discharge valve and blasted downstream.  Afterwards, the flow was much 
> improved.
> 
> That got us wondering about the rest of the drains, scuppers, etc.  Sure 
> enough, the head sink drain was completely plugged.  Amazing that, in a 
> marina, the boat moved enough that the stuff could "pump" its way onto the 
> counter.  We blew it out with dock water pressure.  See the picture linked 
> below.
> 
> https://drive.google.com/file/d/1cf0QdaiP1rqt-LYtH2Yb2Pft-8w0lMuA/view?usp=sharing
>  
> 
> 
> The galley sink drain was also plugged and required disassembly to clear.  We 
> blew out the cockpit scuppers.
> 
> After some head scratching, we decided the pluggage was vegetative debris 
> which somehow entered the thruhulls during the storm, floated on top of the 
> water columns and then agglomerated once things calmed down.  Yes, all the 
> thru hull valves were open.
> 
> Only the drains which were open to the atmosphere were affected.  Those that 
> had configurations that prevented free flow, the engine intake and head 
> intake were not affected.
> 
> Just a crazy hurricane thing.
> 
> Touche' is back in Louisiana now safe and secure in its home slip in 
> Mandeville.
> 30°20'59.29"N  90° 3'14.42"W
> -- 
> Dennis C.
> Touche' 35-1 #83
> Mandeville, LA
> October is the time to show your appreciation with a small contribution to 
> this list to help offset the costs. If you want to support the list - use 
> PayPal to send contribution --   https://www.paypal.me/stumurray  Thanks - Stu

October is the time to show your appreciation with a small contribution to this 
list to help offset the costs. If you want to support the list - use PayPal to 
send contribution --   https://www.paypal.me/stumurray  Thanks - Stu