[Rhodes22-list] Hull Thickness
Graham Stewart
gstewart8 at cogeco.ca
Mon Oct 25 22:48:36 EDT 2021
Joe:
The mystery of how water was getting into my lazarette left me stumped for
years - nearly drove me mad. However this year I think I found the problem.
The seats have small drain holes where water runs through to the cockpit
sole. I think what is happening is that with heavy rain, however, the
surface tension of the water increases and a stream of water runs back on
the bottom of the seat behind the bulkhead and then drops off into the
lazarette. I can't be certain as I didn't have time to hang paper towel in
strategic locations before I had to haul the boat for the winter. I might
still be wrong about this but it would be an easy fix to put a bead of
silicone across the bottom of the seat before the lazarette bulkhead to
break the surface tension. Just a thought.
Graham
Graham Stewart
Agile, Rodes 22, 1976
Kingston Ontario
-----Original Message-----
From: Rhodes22-list [mailto:rhodes22-list-bounces at rhodes22.org] On Behalf Of
Joe Dempsey
Sent: Monday, October 25, 2021 12:38 PM
To: rhodes22-list at rhodes22.org
Subject: [Rhodes22-list] Hull Thickness
Thanks to all who responded. I ended up using 4200 to mount the base in the
lowest part of the lazarette. Note: the cockpit drain hose is located so
that there is not enough clearance between the hose and bulkhead so I had to
offset just enough so I can still remove the pump from the base. Works fine.
For those who have a dry lazarette: Great, wish I did, but I don't. If I
could find the source I would have corrected it. Hope springs eternal. I
don't get much, but more than I want to sponge out each time I go out. I
have replaced both drains in the cockpit seat troughs as well as the hoses
below. I have a shelf in the bottom of the lazarette which I store my anchor
rode and some other items. I was getting enough water to wet the rode. The
pump keeps the water down to about half an inch.
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