[Rhodes22-list] Bilge Water

Lowe, Rob rlowe at vt.edu
Fri Jun 29 14:29:22 EDT 2012


Good point on checking the drain hose through the sink drain.  If you have a bilge pump and the hose does not run up high enough, you can get water running into the hose on a starboard tack or in heavy seas. - rob

-----Original Message-----
From: rhodes22-list-bounces at rhodes22.org [mailto:rhodes22-list-bounces at rhodes22.org] On Behalf Of Bob and Kathy Quinn
Sent: Friday, June 29, 2012 2:09 PM
To: The Rhodes 22 Email List
Subject: Re: [Rhodes22-list] Bilge Water

David:  Two potential problems:  one simple, one a bit more complex. 


One:  Check the drain hose from the sink to the through hull.  My '86 had a split in the hose which was very hard to detect.  When on a starbord tack, I was sucking in water by the gallons.  


Second:  If one above is not the issue, you may be bring in water through the hull to deck seam.  Check the side walls up under the sink  or behind the cushions for dampness.  Easy cure is to run a caulking bead along the seam under the rub rail if that is the problem.

Bob in FL on the R22 NoKaOi 3



________________________________
 From: David Craft <chsyhkr at gmail.com>
To: Rhodes List <rhodes22-list at rhodes22.org>
Sent: Tuesday, June 26, 2012 8:15 PM
Subject: [Rhodes22-list] Bilge Water
 
Well Friends,

We took our first significant trip in our Rhodes from Southport, NC up the Cape Fear to Wilmington.

On the way back down I had to make a call between fighting tide all day or riding the tide and dealing with some headwinds the last 5 miles into Southport.

The Cape Fear runs due south from Wilmington making a turn to the SW at Snow's Cut in the ICW.  At this junction the wind really picked up, dead ahead, and we motored to Southport.   The last few miles the falling tide and head winds were at odds created serious chop.  We were taking quite a few shots over the bow.

After cleaning up and over nighting at Southport Marina, we took the boat out and over to the storage lot to clean up.  The carpet was wet, so I removed and looked in the bilge, which I had only checked once before in the 10 months we owned the boat.  It had about 4 inches of water, which after pumping and dumping equaled 10-12 gallons.  We removed most everything from the boat and left her open with the front scoop taking in a nice NE dry wind.    The lot owner will close her up later this week, no chance of rain, but we are both watching the forecast.

I plan on going back in a week, cleaning up a bit more, and putting most things back.

Questions-  any thing else I missed doing to protect the boat from mold, ect.?  Clean up with some bleach and water?  Where did the water come from?
A friend says from gaps in the deck and hull toward the bow.  I can see some spaced behind the white trim moulding.  Is this a winter project?

I do not plan on sailing in such conditions again.  The Cape Fear is notorious this type of roiling chop.  Besides we are headed up toward Oriental in the fall to test those waters......

Thanks for any advice.

By the way,  it was a great trip otherwise...

--
Regards,

David B. Craft
Greensboro, NC
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