Big Duck

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jeffnick

Well-known member
Joined
Feb 21, 2006
Messages
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Location
Spartanburg, SC
Planned to go out on a New Years Eve cruise overnight. Loaded her up with 40 gallons of non ethanol fuel, got myself a dinghy to get the dog ashore for potty...
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and the next morning I woke up to find 20 gallons of gasoline in the bilge -- with the electric space heater running because we didn't winterize in anticipation of the launch.

The bilge pump emptied about 10 gallons of gas onto the cement and I sucked 10 gallons out of the bilge and another 20 out of the leaking tank.
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The boat didn't come with a garboard drain plug but I put one in after the fiasco. Fittings to be installed later.
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The day after I got all the fuel out of the boat/bilge/tanks, the shore power and heater quit working. Now I had to fix that or winterize.

Found the shore power inlet had burned through the hot wire.
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and the cord was toast
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might want to check yours?

My electrical engineer son-in-law said that even though the inlet and cord were 30 amp, the wire from the inlet to the fuse panel was only 20 amp rated.

So we fixed the wiring and shore power cable -- and left the space heater on so none of the water left in the bilge would freeze and do damage. I guess having gasoline in the bilge would tend to inhibit rot anywhere if there was any?

I've gotta pull the engine to get to the fuel tanks. 'Been working on something that will let me do it myself. A tow truck is the fall back option, but being retired, a schedule, if only to have the tow truck over for 10 minutes or so, just isn't palatable.

I'm working on a pickup crane on deck to get the motor out...
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then I have a cherry picker to get the motor off the deck to the ground
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...then we'll start to work on the aluminum tank removal. You can see the tank here, peeking into the engine compartment.
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This isn't a "Poor, poor Nick" scenario - I'm enjoying every minute of it, and it appears that Big Duck wants the upgrades rather than burning herself down! :D
 
Brent":2g7j8o7e said:
sorry for the bad luck.
Will the tank be repaired or replaced?

No problem with the luck. I got the boat for a song on eBay and expected her to need some work - she's 40 years old.

Not sure what I'll do about the aluminum tanks. They're designed for maximum capacity and any replacements would reduce that substantially. Once I get them out, I'll see first if they can be repaired and if not go from there. They're mounted between the stringers so the width dimension cannot be increased by a repair...don't know yet whether it's the bottoms that are leaking and/or seams/sides of the tank. What I can see of the tanks looks very good.
 
what an awesome party platform!
Look forward to more boat progess porn.

right on dude!
 
Brent":yjs1kmyr said:
I read using "rubber" strips under tanks can cause tanks corrosion due to sulfur compounds

No straps apparent. Looks to be sandwiched in the stringers between bulkheads, being held down by cabin floor.
 
How about something like this to yank that motor?

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This was a method I've seen used on ClassicMako and on ClassicSeaCraft.

I secured some 4x4 posts to two pine trees in my yard by wrapping a 1/2" threaded rod around each tree, passing it through some holes drilled in the posts and bolting them in place. Then I bolted two 10' 2x10s together and rested them on top of the 4x4s. To ensure the 2x10s wouldn't flop over, I locked them in place with a few braces screwed to the 4x4s. This contraption then supported a 1/2-ton chain fall I had borrowed from a friend of my father.

All I had to do was back the boat ('76 Formula 233) into position, hook the chain fall to the motors, lift the motors and then pull the boat out. Worked like a charm.
 
Congratulations on plucking the motor! :lol: Hope you keep us posted on the tank removal.
 
jeffnick":2whj39yj said:
I'm enjoying every minute of it, and it appears that Big Duck wants the upgrades rather than burning herself down! :D

Absolutely!
So many ignition sources... and she didn't catch fire. :shock:

You sir, have a (good) angel on your shoulder! :)
 
Brent":3vdxpdt6 said:
Is the tank secured with clamps or straps which you remove and pull out the tank?

We can now see that the tank is 'foamed' in place. Every inch of hidden open space is filled with foam...ceiling, walls and bilge This 6,000#+ boat actually has positive floatation!
 
At first looks, I imagined a 25 h.p. mounted on a bracket with a simple 18 gal. poly tank. Leave motor out for weight savings. Load the people on and have fun on the water.
 
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