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Stocking
Up Your Boat
By: Ieuan Dolby |
There, you have
just got a boat. A nice new hobby for the
weekend and it is time to stock it out. It
is time to get all that equipment and gear
that you have read about in all the
magazines and that you have dreamt about for
so long. Time to fill that boat up with all
the latest goodies and set sail into the
unknown. Sail out and over the horizon,
ready for all that may be placed in your
way!
The engine has always been my greatest
problem and I have this constant nightmare
of breaking down whilst away from shore. The
last thing that I want to do is to call for
help and admit to everybody that I was not
ready. Spanners, screwdrivers, engine tool
kit and a few essential spares are of course
a necessity but the Chain Block and the
torque wrench, the hydraulic spanner and the
ten-pound hammer? I am not so sure that I
will ever really need them at sea.
What are you going to do with them? Lift the
engine off the block and do a complete strip
down whilst bobbing on the water? Let us
look into this before we dive in and fill
the boat up full to the brim with
unessential items. Before we fill up the
cabin drawers with tools of all shapes and
sizes and electrical equipment that would
stretch your power supply to its limits. It
must be remembered that if the problem is a
serious one then nine times out of ten you
will not have the correct spare part anyway!
So what do you really need before you make a
storeroom out of every available space
onboard?
Tools are essential and maybe the saving
grace to any that lose their power at sea.
Tools are required to unblock a fuel filter
or cure a leaking pipe, but you are not
going to be doing a complete overhaul so
leave the 18” monkey wrench behind along
with the engine lifting frame and the
welding machine. Leave them safely at home
in the garage and set sail with the minimum
of required tools for essential repairs.
Have in your boat enough tools to do the job
and leave plenty of space for all the food
and goodies that will make the trip into
what you dreamt it would be like. Don’t turn
your boat into a nightmare with unnecessary
tools falling out of cupboards and leaving
oily stains everywhere, just have what you
need and set sail happily. Don’t have your
friends and guests complaining of stubbed
toes and bruises on the head as they work
there way through the cupboards whilst
searching for some food to eat!
The crucial point to remember about engine
maintenance and repair is that it should all
have been done before you left port. The
engine and auxiliary equipment should be in
a good condition and able to do the job it
is meant to do before you take the last rope
off the jetty. So any repairs and work
should have been carried out before you even
thought of stocking up for the trip. When
you set sail you should have underneath you
a boat ready and prepared for all occasions,
one that you can trust in to do the job that
it is required to do.
In many situations the amount of equipment
that you carry does depend on the skills
that you yourself possess. First of all, if
you are not very good at engine overhauls
then it is pointless to have the larger
pieces of equipment anyway. If you are good
at doing engine overhauls and have knowledge
about what you are doing then you should not
have set sail with a faulty engine in the
first place. It is possible that you
breakdown through no fault of your own but
it is far better to have a good
communication system to call for help and
swallow your pride than to try and fix the
engine yourself.
Essential items therefore consist of a set
of spanners, a couple of hammers, a set of
screwdrivers, and an adjustable wrench. One
monkey wrench of a small size, filter
removal strap for the Fuel filters and LO
filters, hand crank handle if the engine is
small, a spare set of batteries, some spare
Lubricating Oil and some odds and ends of
screws and nuts and bolts. Along with these
items should be the engines tool kit,
essential spares for the engine including a
couple of injectors, fuel filter and LO
filter inserts and anything else that the
manufacturer recommends for that engine.
Leave behind the Chain Block, the large
Monkey Wrench and the Hydraulic Spanners.
Leave behind the spare heads and the spare
crankshaft and all the spares that require
the use of a chain block. Make sure before
you leave that the engine is in top working
condition and that you can trust in its
ability to take you where you want to go
without breaking down on the way. And
finally make sure that your communication
system is suitable and in a good working
condition, so that if a problem does arise
help is not far away.
There is no pride to think of when you
breakdown. Safety is of a higher priority.
Ieuan Dolby
Author and Webmaster of
SeaDolby.com.
© Copyright 2004 by
Ieuan Dolby |
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