hull side air intakes
Moderators: BeaconMarineBob, Moderator, BeaconMarineDon
hull side air intakes
just purchased 1978 f-32 trojan all 4 of the air intakes on the hull sides are pointing forward, knowing this was designed to circulate air in the engine room as the boat is moving it seems there should be at least 2 pointing aft which would allow incoming air a way to be pulled out by the rear facing vents. were they all designed to face forward or has someone changed the direction on them by mistake? any thoughts? i noticed on some trojans for sale on the internet even have them all facing back so just wonder which should be forward and which facing rear?
- Stripermann2
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- TADTOOMUCH
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Vents Louvre Position
Do a search on the internet for Sea Mar II which sunk in Lake Michigan possibly due to an incorrect louvre installation which resulted in scooping in large amounts of water in high seas. I believe they discuss a lawsuit pending with Trojan based on a manufacturing error. Obviously with Trojan out of business, the lawyers don't get paid. Too bad for them. But also so sad for the families of the three who perished.
http://www.michiganshipwrecks.org/seamar.htm
http://www.michiganshipwrecks.org/seamar.htm
- prowlersfish
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?
The old vents weren't the crtical problem here.
Having only 1 bilge pump, and having it up front was the final blow. This is marginal at the dock (need 2 fore + 2 aft), but totally unacceptable underway. The forward pumps will nver pump the rear out underway, and the boat will take on water (shaft seals, spray, vents, cockpit deck, etc.) and continue to fill until it sinks.
Does ANYONE NOT have rear bilge pumps? I you don't, then remain at the dock until you do!
Having only 1 bilge pump, and having it up front was the final blow. This is marginal at the dock (need 2 fore + 2 aft), but totally unacceptable underway. The forward pumps will nver pump the rear out underway, and the boat will take on water (shaft seals, spray, vents, cockpit deck, etc.) and continue to fill until it sinks.
Does ANYONE NOT have rear bilge pumps? I you don't, then remain at the dock until you do!
Captain Ross, 2009 Trojan Boater of the Year
"Viva Mahia" F32 Cummins 6BTA diesels,
"Mack Attack" Chaparral 244 Fish, SeaPro 180, McKee 14, Montauk-17

"Viva Mahia" F32 Cummins 6BTA diesels,
"Mack Attack" Chaparral 244 Fish, SeaPro 180, McKee 14, Montauk-17

- TADTOOMUCH
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Bilge pumps
I have two bilge pumps. One fore and one aft. The fore pump has a large housing that does not allow for all of the water to be pumped out because it sits above the V in the hull. The aft pump works great underway but the fore pump lets too much water sit in the hull when docked and I would like to get all the water out that I can so as not to rot out the stringers or bulkeads. Anyone have suggestion to get all the water out of the bow end?
this is my pump configuration. I have 4 total- 1 auto fore, 1 auto aft, 1 emergency high capacity with high water alarm aft and 1 small diameter electric (manually controlled) in the bows low spot to suck the bilge dry. It had to be manually contolled because a float would stop the pump before all the water was sucked out. The only problem with this setup is that there can be some standing water in the bow at rest for the same reason you state. But, it's nice to be able to pump it dry before heading out.
i have twp pumps, one fore and one aft. Both on float switches and can be turned on and off manually. Guess I'm lucky but my boat stays dry with the exception of a very small trickle from one rudder seal, and then only when underway..........never enough to run the pump. I occaisonally check them manually but never pump any water.......
1972 Trojan Sea Raider F30 - FI 350's "Time Warp"
1998 Kawasaki ZXi 1100
1972 Chevy Fleetside Shortbed hotrod.......450hp
10.5 Newport Inflatable w/15hp Rude
1998 Kawasaki ZXi 1100
1972 Chevy Fleetside Shortbed hotrod.......450hp
10.5 Newport Inflatable w/15hp Rude
- TADTOOMUCH
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Manual pump
I think I will install a manual pump to pump the bow end dry by hand occasionally to keep it dry. The shafts do not leak that much so it should stay dry up front for a week if I manually pump it dry. There used to be a manual pump in the starboard locker in the v-berth and there is already a through hull fitting capped off in there so I can just hook up a manual pump and put the suction hose right in the lowest spot to get out the last bit of water.
- prowlersfish
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