T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
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432.1 | Diesels and Old Bushmills | IMNAUT::SIEGMANN | | Thu Oct 30 1986 12:55 | 18 |
| Dave, I've been wintering-in for 7 years now and it is well worth
the effort. As I have a wooden boat this makes sense from a longevity
point as well. If you plan to use the boat during the winter (does
it freexe in there?) make sure that when you fire up the engine
you let it reach full oper temp before shutting down, otherwise
the acids formed will not do good things to the innards and exhaust
system. I generally assume a 3 month moratorium on the engine and
fill the raw water parts with ethelyne glycol, drain old oil and
replace with new, turn over engine without starting for 15-30
secs to get new good oil into passages, put a cover over air intake
and open a bottle of Old Bushmills.......
I also drain the water tanks and add 1qt of cheap vodka to stop
freezing in the pump and make spring all that much more pleasant..
I also top off the diesel fuel and add an inhibitor and/or a few
qts of kerosene to make cold starting easier.
Then we go out to it in the winter, fire up the heater and pretend.
Regards, Ed
|
432.2 | Mild U.K. Winters | RDGE28::WILTSHIRE | Vorsprung durch Technik | Fri Oct 31 1986 04:42 | 20 |
| Thank you for the help Ed.
Plymouth does not freeze, thanks to the Gulf Stream, and our
winters are mild (2 days of snow last year) so there should
be opportunity for the boat to be used at least a couple of times.
Thats a good point of yours about letting the engine get upto full working
temperature. I plan to drain all the water tanks and keep the
fuel tank full to prevent condensation and stop water getting in the
diesel (yuk!). I've never thought of using Vodka as an anti-ice
agent, I would prefer it in me rather than the water tanks !
How cold does it have to be before seawater will freeze ? I assume
that the water could freeze in the engine and crack the block, not
a nice situation !
Thanks again,
Dave
|
432.3 | where'd I put the olives ? | GRAMPS::WCLARK | Walt Clark | Fri Oct 31 1986 08:11 | 8 |
| I love the Vodka for winterizing the potable water system Ed, does
it hurt rubber diaphrams in pumps any ?
Walt
<would much prefer to taste Vodka in my water......
...... than that nasty pink stuff>
|
432.4 | Vodka as a way to happiness | IMNAUT::SIEGMANN | | Fri Oct 31 1986 10:52 | 16 |
| <<<.2 I haven't had a problem with the salt water freezing in the
block but then I drain the raw water side. For you the safe thing
would be to close the water intake, remove hose, run engine until
salt water is gone. In fact, I can run the diesel without raw water
cooling for well over 1/2 hour without load and not overheat anything,
just relying on the fresh water for cooling.
<<<.3 I have been oing this for 7 years and still have the same
pump diaphrams. Perhaps the solution is so diluted and I do run
the pump until no more water comes out the taps. The glycol tends
to adhere to everything and folks I know who use it complain about
the taste forever... Perhaps I could re-bottle the vodka and call
it 'Eds special elixir for winterizing' and retire from DEC (-:
Happy sailing. Ed
|
432.5 | Raw Water Cooling.. | RDGE28::WILTSHIRE | Vorsprung durch Technik | Fri Oct 31 1986 11:46 | 21 |
| > In fact, I can run the diesel without raw water
> cooling for well over 1/2 hour without load and not overheat anything,
> just relying on the fresh water for cooling.
I forgot to tell you, our engine is a Volvo Penta MD2B which uses
raw sea water to cool the engine. The hot sea water is mixed with the
exhaust gases and shot out of the back of the boat. If it runs for
even a couple of minutes without water the neoprene impeller will self
destruct or so I have been told !
When I inhibited the engine last year I had it running on a mixture
of water and soluble oil. This would be a bit impractical to do
after every winter jaunt !
Is there any easy way to clear the cooling system of water without
destroying my impeller ?
Cheers,
Dave
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432.6 | Glycol and seaH20 | IMNAUT::SIEGMANN | | Fri Oct 31 1986 13:46 | 12 |
| I guess no 'easy' way except to disconnect the raw water intake
and put it in a can of glycol and run until it comes out the exhaust.
Then when you want to go sailing just re-connect the intake. I envy
you guys with mild winters... I have a friend who just single handed
from here to Galway and left the boat there for the winter but I
believe he is having it hauled. He claims excellent sailing there
and will return in the spring. Is the sailing good, ie. free from
fog, people and lots of harbo(u)rs? He keeps trying to get me to
go with him for the jaunt back but I'm not too excited about sailing
back in a 30' old Alden.
Good winds and fair tides, Ed
|
432.7 | Ireland et alia | RDGE28::WILTSHIRE | Vorsprung durch Technik | Mon Nov 03 1986 04:01 | 14 |
| I've never sailed in Ireland, but from what is written in the mags.
it would be a good area to cruise, so if you get the chance, go!
Ireland is not saturated with boats and people yet, unlike the
Isle of Wright and the Solent. Once you reach Ireland there are
many good cruising grounds within a couple of days sailing e.g.
Scotland, Brittany, Cornwall etc.
Cheers,
Dave
P.S. Went sailing on Sunday, force 5-6 calm sea, Heaven !!!!
|
432.8 | RE: Diesels and Old Bushmills | RIVEST::TIERNEY | | Tue Nov 11 1986 11:38 | 6 |
|
RE: #1
Hopefully the Old Bushmills went in you, not the boat?!!
|
432.9 | | COBOLT::PMAIER | | Mon Nov 17 1986 04:49 | 23 |
|
I'm wintering since 5 years and I have a Volvo Penta wit raw water
cooling.My boat is on a lake in Switzerland.Temperature is sometimes
-20 degres centegrade.I had never any problems.I'm using my boat as well
during winter.(the lake never freezes)
There are 3 small valves on the MD2B motor.One on each cylinder
(bottom) and one on the exhaust collector.I open only the two on
the cylinders and let the water drain.I also close the waterintake.
I do nothing about the drinking water.So far it never froze and
we had a very hard winter last year.
I get my dieselfuel normaly during summer.So it will freeze by -5.
I add additiv to make it good for -30 .
I'm running the motor normaly once every month at least for 1 hour
to get him to operating temperatur and maintain my batteries.
25.Dezember is a nice sailing day.Good luck,
Peter
|
432.10 | Diesel Wax.. | RDGENG::WILTSHIRE | Vorsprung durch Technik | Mon Nov 17 1986 13:27 | 12 |
| Peter,
I've not given much thought to the idea of diesel fuel changing
it's characteristics in freezing conditions.
What additive do you use to prevent your fuel from becoming an
inert 'lump of wax' ?
Cheers,
Dave.
|
432.11 | Diesel additiv | COBOLT::PMAIER | | Thu Nov 20 1986 05:38 | 19 |
|
In Europe,petrolstation start around October to change from
summerdiesel to winterdiesel.I believe winterdiesel is going down
to -14 degr centr.Large petrolstations (look for trucks)are selling
additiv for dieselfuel.There are two types.One includes "magic"
and it should clean your injectors.Its very expensive.The other
one says nothing about cleaning injectors and its used by trucks
and is used only to make dieselfuel safe in cold weather.And its
cheap.1 liter goes for 100 liter diesel.
A even cheaper way is to use normal unleaded petrol.You should
not add more than 25% petrol,otherwise you are damaging the injector-
pump.
Peter
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