Hi,
I intend to take a scientific process of elimination to this problem but thought I'd ask here in case anyone already has the most likely answer.
After a typical day out, our 2004 Hunter 306 has about a half cup of salt water in the bilge. At the dock she stays bone dry, especially after we installed the PSS last year. We also had all new seacocks fitted two years ago when we bought her. Nothing under the engine. Nothing apparent trailing from the log/depth fittings in the forward bilge area. It all seems to concentrate around the central bilge section where all the "action" is (where the bilge pump, refrig hose, head floor drain etc all meet).
I'm wondering if the bilge discharge outlet might be slowly siphoning water back into the bilge (given there is no seacock) when we're moving, but not sure how feasible that is.
Thanks as always for any insight!
Cheers, Robert
Charisma H306
Westernport Marina
Victoria, Australia
I intend to take a scientific process of elimination to this problem but thought I'd ask here in case anyone already has the most likely answer.
After a typical day out, our 2004 Hunter 306 has about a half cup of salt water in the bilge. At the dock she stays bone dry, especially after we installed the PSS last year. We also had all new seacocks fitted two years ago when we bought her. Nothing under the engine. Nothing apparent trailing from the log/depth fittings in the forward bilge area. It all seems to concentrate around the central bilge section where all the "action" is (where the bilge pump, refrig hose, head floor drain etc all meet).
I'm wondering if the bilge discharge outlet might be slowly siphoning water back into the bilge (given there is no seacock) when we're moving, but not sure how feasible that is.
Thanks as always for any insight!
Cheers, Robert
Charisma H306
Westernport Marina
Victoria, Australia