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Tuesday, March 18, 2014

Ghosts in the Machine: Used Sailboat Adventures



My otherwise faithful Balmar Alternator and external regulator recently sound as if they’re revving-up and then down.   Two to four seconds pass, then it reoccurs. The sound corresponds with: 
  • ·      The battery voltage moving up and down
  • ·      A green light flash on the regulator (May not be 100% correlation).
  • ·      A Tachometer that waves at me.


These used sailboat symptoms appear less noticeable while under load and after the engine runs for a few hours.  Both devices are quite old but I don’t have dates.  They didn’t always make this sound.   The alternator belt is in good condition and doesn’t appear to slip.  

Questions: 
  • What would cause this?
  • Are my Batteries at risk?
  • The alternator is charging a bus which is connected to three different banks is that an issue?

I look forward to posting my solution soon.


Measurement Details and Pictures Below:

Engine Run time
(.3=30 sec)
Battery
Measurement tool
Low Voltage
High Voltage
Delta in volts
Off
Starter
Volt Meter
12.4
NA
NA
Off
Starter
Gauge
12.7
NA
NA
Off
House
Volt Meter
12.9
NA
NA
Off
House
Energy Monitor
12.96
NA
NA
Off
House
Gauge
13.2
NA
NA
Off
Regulator- Blk&Red
Volt Meter
12.9
NA
NA
0.3
Starter
Gauge
13.5
15
1.5
0.5
House
Gauge
14.5
15
0.5
2.4
Starter
Volt Meter
13.2
13.8
0.6
3.5
House
Volt Meter
13.9
14.3
0.4
4.57
Regulator- Blk&Red
Volt Meter
13.8
14.2
0.4
14.36
House
Gauge
13.6
15
1.4
15
House
Energy Monitor
14.1
14.5
0.4
17
Starter
Volt Meter
13.1
14.6
1.5
18
House
Volt Meter
14.1
14.3
0.2

Description: Macintosh HD:Users:viviandjohn:Pictures:iPhoto Library:Previews:2014:02:08:20140208-134504:IMG_0300.jpg       Description: Macintosh HD:Users:viviandjohn:Pictures:iPhoto Library:Previews:2013:05:16:20130516-114027:100_2033.JPG

Friday, March 7, 2014

Used Boat Courage




Maintaining a used sailboat takes courage.  “Courage” defined here as the willingness to take something apart while lacking the ability to rebuild it and, while standing on one’s head.

Some boat projects feel overwhelming and can push the captain well beyond the comfort zone.  In fact, one is often driven past that Am I just making this worse zone, straight through the I should have photographed how this looked before dismantling zone, and deep into the dark hollows of the How much will this cost me zone.

Take for example “Un Tie the Lines”  a series of short videos artfully telling the story of a young, courageous woman who left her country, family, and job, to restore a used sailboat in Panama with the dream of sailing it over the horizon.  It’s still unfolding.  See it on Utube.

Used SailBoat Project Lifecycle:
Something seems wrong-- A gauge raises, a new sound, a new smell, or water droplets appear.  This wrong thing becomes an annoyance and eventually speaks louder, or smells worse than all the other projects on the boat’s perpetual list.  Then, like the damn faulty grill lighter, one day, BANG!  This nagging feeling pokes through the subconscious and ignites the decision to start the project.

Planning Phase:
  • Watch related utube videos- That someone already experienced this problem, is likely.  That someone bothered to record and post it for you, is amazing.
  • Draft your version of the steps- Great reason to sit and relax. 
  • Talk to your marina:
    • Consulting an expert never hurts
    • Learning the cost of actually hiring an expert provides motivation to either figure this out or sell your home.
    • The marina’s cost estimate also provides an artificial reference point that can justify the purchase of a new tool (that you’ve always wanted anyway) which brings me to:
  • Talk to your Spouse:
    • Women, and especially my wife, have an ability to incite courage- more effective than “I dare you…” was as a kid.
    • My head is a tangled weave of boat projects.  My wife, who’s sailed next to me since we’ve owned the boat, has no, none, zero boat projects on her mind.  She naps  while I fix.  But her “outside perspective” often helps me prioritize and avoid bad, expensive, ideas.
  • Purchase the materials- Two choices, go to a:
    • Marine supply store, and pay three times “fair price.” For exactly what you need, Or,
    • Go to a hardware store, pay a fair price for a highly corrosive version of  “sort-a like” what you need.


Destruction Phase:
  • With a plan, materials, and yourself uncomfortably contorted in position, start dismantling anything limiting access to the problem. This spawns the inevitable question:  How far am I willing to drill, dig, unscrew, break and pay to solve this problem. 
  • With a clear line of site, investigate the problems’ root cause and choose from one of six solutions.

Solution Phase:
All boat problems are resolved with some combination of these six steps:  Sand, clean, epoxy, replace, purchase, and patch.

Rebuild Phase:
Start by looking for the lost screws and determining which screws go into which holes because none use the same thread size.  Review old pictures of boat guests hoping to catch a glimpse of how the work site looked like prior starting the project.

The moment of truth is that point at which you can test your repair.  Always cleanup prior to testing.  This is because if the test proves successful, my manly motivation to clean instantly disappears.

We crown every successful project with two triumphant words:  “It works!”  Taken from the early days of discovering our recently purchased used sailboat. Many items needed repair so when something functioned as designed, it was cause for a celebratory exclamation of “It works!”

Completion is genuinely satisfying.  I know more about my boat, I may have a new skill, tool, or a better /safer boat.  I have the satisfaction of knowing that one more piece to this used sailboat- this micro world- this island of self sustainability, is now functional, stronger, cleaner, and done.