hey everyone, just bought a cowl vent for my dorade box but I'm wondering should the opening be facing forward or backward?
it is located about midship above the head
it is located about midship above the head
I think this is one of those "sounds good on paper" but in real life it isn't so. Dorade box drain holes tend to be very small, maybe a quarter inch, large enough to drain the occasional wave or wind driven rain. The cowl has a large opening that funnels air into a slightly smaller opening, this pressurizes the dorade, with the bulk of the fresh air going through the 3 or 4 inch opening and into the cabin.Because of the water drains in the box part it will not pull air out of the boat. It is an in for air, not extraction, so as above face it forward.
There used to be ventury vents with a smaller cone intake to windward and a larger one down wind. Those would pull air out of a cabin, but ours sure won't with just the curved cowl pointing aft. We do indeed turn them around when going sailing, but that is to keep water out, not to get air out.I think this is one of those "sounds good on paper" but in real life it isn't so. Dorade box drain holes tend to be very small, maybe a quarter inch, large enough to drain the occasional wave or wind driven rain. The cowl has a large opening that funnels air into a slightly smaller opening, this pressurizes the dorade, with the bulk of the fresh air going through the 3 or 4 inch opening and into the cabin.
Besides, if a lot of green water is coming over the bow, turn the cowl around to prevent water from coming out, the vacuum will still pull some air out.
This certainly isn't the case on my boat; the Dorade scuppers are quite large, could get rid of all of the water the cowls could swallow, in my opinion. I would guess there's at least as much scupper area as cowl input area. I guess it will vary by boat.Dorade box drain holes tend to be very small, maybe a quarter inch, large enough to drain the occasional wave or wind driven rain.
If that was the case, then your dorades would be ineffective. There needs to be enough aerodynamic resistance in the drain holes to force the air to flow into the cabin. Looking at the photos @capta posted, it appears the drain holes are fairly small, perhaps ¾" x ⅜". That would yield roughly 1 square inch of drainage. A cowl with a 4" diameter (and a very small cowl at that) has about a 12.5 in^2 opening to allow air to flow in. I think it is a safe bet that the outlet for his cowls is at least 3" in diameter, which would give it about a 9.5 in^2 diameter opening into the cabin.This certainly isn't the case on my boat; the Dorade scuppers are quite large, could get rid of all of the water the cowls could swallow, in my opinion. I would guess there's at least as much scupper area as cowl input area. I guess it will vary by boat.
They must be in the right place (no act on my part), Roy because I don't recall sheets catching them except maybe once or twice. The cowls do have a small rod from the lower lip to their base which leaves less places to hang up.Tom, How do you keep your sheet lines from snagging on these?