I have disconnected, labeled and documented 30 wires so far, but I am nursing a shoulder injury and it was quite difficult and I think I aggravated my injury. It would be easier to reconnect the wires than finish the job. I will look again at relocating the water heater, but I'm not optimistic. Thanks for the information. You're right about boats being projects, and I new that when I bought this one; however, I didn't know I would be restoring the entire boat -- that seems to be what is going on. DavidO
--- On Mon, 12/8/08, Rocco <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: From: Rocco <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> Subject: [UnifliteWorld] Re: R & R water heater To: "UnifliteWorld" <[email protected]> Date: Monday, December 8, 2008, 8:04 AM I have a 41' YF which is a stretch 36DC. Our generator is in the lazarette (where is takes a beating from the weather). The fwd machinery space has the holding tank on the stbd side and the hot water heater on a shelf way behind the air conditioners. I thought I mighr have to remove the hw heater because I kept finding fresh water in the bilge (turns out it was the faucet washers in the shower leaking BEHIND the shower panel) so I checked dimensions. Sure enough it won't fit through BUT the box on top of the a/c looks fairly easy to remove and replace. You might consider cutting out the old heater and putting the new one behind the A/Cs. Ever boat project results in another project... On Dec 7, 3:34 pm, waterguy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > How about measuring the access path so you know what the maximum size > for a new one is and using a Sawzall on the old one and taking it out > in pieces? I recommend this with some hesitancy due to the proximity > to your genset and the risk of sparks, but keep a fire extingusher > handy and there probably wouldn't be a problem, especially as (I > believe from the "D" in the generator model number) you've got diesel, > rather than gasoline, power. > > Another possibility that occurs to me is that you might be able to > disconnect the genset fuel line (and possibly the electrical > connections), remove the mounting bolts, and shift it a few inches. > Maybe get a couple of pieces of 1/2-inch circular steel stock to slip > under the mounting pads to roll it on? > > On Dec 5, 1:28 pm, David Oates <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > > > Dave W, > > I like the way you think. Actually, I have considered it and I don't think there is a very good alternative. The only one would be sitting on the stringers in the center of the boat forward of the engines. However, that would block access to two batteries and I really like the weight over where the heater is now. The center isn't bad, but if I then moved the batteries to starboard... I don't know. The two air conditioning systems are over on the starboard. The boat seems to set "level" now. > > > > DavidO > > > --- On Fri, 12/5/08, wiltfong <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > From: wiltfong <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> > > Subject: [UnifliteWorld] Re: R & R water heater > > To: [email protected] > > Date: Friday, December 5, 2008, 12:04 PM > > > Have you considered leaving the old one in place and finding a new place for the replacement? After the new one is in, you could just leave the old one till a more convenient time such as a generator replacement or work on the electrical system. So the old one isn't doing anything..It doesn't weigh much when empty. > > > > Dave W > > > > > > > > In a message dated 12/05/08 09:54:55 Pacific Standard Time, [EMAIL PROTECTED] writes: > > > #yiv2053795839 .aolmailheader {font-size:8pt;color:black;font-family:Arial;} > > #yiv2053795839 a.aolmailheader:link {color:blue;text-decoration:underline;font-weight:normal;} > > #yiv2053795839 a.aolmailheader:visited {color:magenta;text-decoration:underline;font-weight:normal;} > > #yiv2053795839 a.aolmailheader:active {color:blue;text-decoration:underline;font-weight:normal;} > > #yiv2053795839 a.aolmailheader:hover {color:blue;text-decoration:underline;font-weight:normal;} > > > The water heater on my '84 42' Double Cabin has failed. I purchased a > > new one, but the R & R is going to be difficult because the heater is > > located far on the port side, outside the Onan 8.0 kW (8.0 MDKD-3CR > > 1A). And the heater is 18 3/4" in diameter. The only way to do the > > exchange is to tip it on its side and slide it out over the back of > > the genset, AFTER the electrical box is removed. Anyway, this job is > > worse than I expected. I'm not sure how it is going to work. The > > only thing I can see to do is to disconnect about a hundred wires in > > the electrical box and remove the box. That is what I had planned to > > do, but it is going to be harder than I thought. I even measured > > other areas that might provide access such as removing the cooling > > system from the port engine or cutting a hole in the sole. None of > > those will work. I'm going to squeeze my way in there tomorrow and > > start testing (for power), tagging, documenting and removing wires. > > Anyone have any thoughts on this project? > > > DavidO > > > > > > Listen to 350+ music, sports, & news radio stations – including songs for the holidays – FREE while you browse. 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