I’ve pondered a bit on the subject, and come to the conclusion that saildrives are an excellent and stupid design. The way I see it, they evolved from inboard/outboard drives, which evolved from outboard motor drive units. The outboard drive that can be raised out of the water when the boat is at-rest is not so stupid.
Saildrives are stupid. They do eliminate shaft vibrations, and provide a drop-in solution for boat builders to reduce the labor and complexity of shaft seals and alignment. But the fully submerged aluminum drive passes a huge maintenance and corrosion nightmare to the boat owners to contend with, not to mention using a big rubber membrane seal that relies solely upon adhesive bonds to keep the boat from sinking.
Another issue with saildrives is that they take in raw water for engine cooling through a combination of slots and holes in the drive leg. The makers will boast that this is a feature - because it eliminates the need for another thru-hull. It also pulls water in down lower so there’s no aeration to interfere with water flow, nor is it likely to suck in surface weed. However if you suck in a fish, or weeds, or plastic bags, or anything else that obstructs the interior of the mysterious cavernous interior of the saildrive passageways, there is no easy way to clear the intake. You can’t poke a hanger or cable down the hose to clear it from inside the boat, and if you dive on it the complete pathway isn’t accessible from underneath in the water.
Regardless, I admit that I signed off on this stupidity and purchased a catamaran last year that has TWO of these design abominations installed …
So I realize I have to accept what it is, but I have done some proactive things to avoid emergency haul out from a blocked intake while cruising.
One thing I did was to drill four 1/16” holes around the main intake at the bottom of the drive, and threaded it with stainless seizing wire to block larger objects from getting sucked in. (Picture below). After I took the picture I coated it with spray-on aluminum primer and bottom paint.
The other thing I did was to add an extra thru-hull in the engine compartment that will not be used except in emergency, if one of my saildrives gets blocked. The intake hose would be diverted from the top of the saildrive to the spare thru-hull.
Of course, I posted this with the understanding that some of you will think this is stupid, that the seizing wire will induce galvanic issues and the extra through hulls create another potential risk. Have at it. I think those issues are smaller than the ones I’m trying to avoid.
Saildrives are stupid. They do eliminate shaft vibrations, and provide a drop-in solution for boat builders to reduce the labor and complexity of shaft seals and alignment. But the fully submerged aluminum drive passes a huge maintenance and corrosion nightmare to the boat owners to contend with, not to mention using a big rubber membrane seal that relies solely upon adhesive bonds to keep the boat from sinking.
Another issue with saildrives is that they take in raw water for engine cooling through a combination of slots and holes in the drive leg. The makers will boast that this is a feature - because it eliminates the need for another thru-hull. It also pulls water in down lower so there’s no aeration to interfere with water flow, nor is it likely to suck in surface weed. However if you suck in a fish, or weeds, or plastic bags, or anything else that obstructs the interior of the mysterious cavernous interior of the saildrive passageways, there is no easy way to clear the intake. You can’t poke a hanger or cable down the hose to clear it from inside the boat, and if you dive on it the complete pathway isn’t accessible from underneath in the water.
Regardless, I admit that I signed off on this stupidity and purchased a catamaran last year that has TWO of these design abominations installed …
So I realize I have to accept what it is, but I have done some proactive things to avoid emergency haul out from a blocked intake while cruising.
One thing I did was to drill four 1/16” holes around the main intake at the bottom of the drive, and threaded it with stainless seizing wire to block larger objects from getting sucked in. (Picture below). After I took the picture I coated it with spray-on aluminum primer and bottom paint.
The other thing I did was to add an extra thru-hull in the engine compartment that will not be used except in emergency, if one of my saildrives gets blocked. The intake hose would be diverted from the top of the saildrive to the spare thru-hull.
Of course, I posted this with the understanding that some of you will think this is stupid, that the seizing wire will induce galvanic issues and the extra through hulls create another potential risk. Have at it. I think those issues are smaller than the ones I’m trying to avoid.
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