Two PYI dripless shaft seal installation caveats
With apologies for flogging a thread topic that just appears to have died of natural causes I would like to add the following two caveats when installing a PYI dripless shaft seal:
(a) take care that NOTHING can push against the sides of the rubber bellows; and
(b) make sure the forward end of the propellor shaft completely bottoms out inside the engine output coupling.
We have had PYI dripless seals on Rivendel II for a decade and nearly 2,000 engine hours during which they performed as advertised. Nonetheless, we narrowly avoided serious consequences when they failed offshore on two separate occasions as a result of easily made and overlooked installation errors.
The first problem occurred in October 2000 as we approached Vitu Levu (Fiji), after a 600 NM upwind sail from Port Vila (Vanuatu). When we approached the narrow passage between two of the smaller islands guarding the natural channel leading to Lakatoro on the engine, as the wind had died after a period of thunderstorms, I noticed a grinding sound coming from the engine compartment. Fearing a problem with the Hurth transmission I investigated but did not see much except for a tired-looking, slightly sagging PYI bellows which turned out to feel burning hot to the touch!! The heat clearly came from the even hotter ss shaft flange. After helping the flange cool off by burping it repeatedly, I assumed that we had either forgotten to burp the flange after Rivendel's last haul-out or that exhaled air had perhaps accumulated inside the shaft tube during bottom-cleaning, However, within 10 minutes after bringing the engine back up to speed (no more than 1800 rpm or so) flange and bellows became very hot again and I realized that I had little choice than to keep pouring water over the entire assembly by hand while Nelleke slowly drove the remaining 10 NM or so to the entrance of Lakatoro harbor. Once we were safely anchored I took a much closer look and realized that the Australian shipwright who had installed the PYI coupling at the beginning of the season while building a bit of a hollow dome in the teak floorhatch covering the bellows in order to avoid friction (as the bellows diameter is appreciably larger than the diameter of the original stuffing box) had underestimated how high the bellows would rise once the propellor thrust pushes the entire engine forward and up on its rubber supports. As a result the floor board had started to push down on the bellows a bit; ever so slightly pushing the dripless seal out of its perfect alignment while causing minute amounts of salt water to penetrate between the carbon and ss halfs of the seal. Eventually, the dry salt produced enough friction to heat up the ss flange and the rubber bellows, thereby jeopardizing its mechanical integrity. Since I no longer trusted the rubber bellows and did not have the right tools to re-polish the flange surfaces, I simply ordered a new seal while using the occasion to switch to PYI's water-cooled flange version in order to forestall any possible repeat of my several hours-long handcooling ordeal.
fAST forward to July 2008 after nearly 8 years of trouble-free PYI use: Rivendel II is leaving Port Vila Harbor on the engine -- via always rough Devils Point and after having had the propellor shaft pulled to receive a new cutless bearing in the local boatyard -- when the bilge pump alarm goes off and does not stop..... I dash below and pull the engine hatch in the aft cabin to see a wild spray of seawater coming from the PYI seal. The bellows looks too expanded so we stop the engine and I manually compress the flange, which immediately stops the water flow, then wind a short length of 5/16" rope tightly around the shaft, starting at the engine output flange, uintil the ss PYI flange is being pushed aft and I see the bellows compress again. Finally, I remove the two double set screws, slightly dimple the shaft with a drill and tighten them back into place. Before starting the engine again I also tighten both big set bolts on the engine output flange (just to make sure), remove the "Spanish windlass" rope, mark the shaft with red ink, both at the ss PYI flange and the output flange side and measure the distance between both flanges with a pair of calipers.
Everything seems fine, as the wind freshens we soon shut the engine down and continue under sail alone for the overnight passage to Malakula. About one week later, however, as we need quite a bit of engine power to try and motorsail out of the Maskelyne lagoon against a strong wind, the bilge pump goes off once again, as the PYI seal starts spraying salt water. The caliper shows that the distance between the two flanges has shortened by almost 10 mm. However, contrary to my expectation, it is the red line in front of the output flange that has disappeared, NOT the line in front of the PYI flange!! To make a long story short: the warff personnel clearly did not put the propellor shaft all the way back into the engine output coupling, and the set bolts were unable to take up the full force of the propellor thrust without slipping. Skipper Evan Logan of the three-master Alvei, our trusty project support vessel, comes to the rescue and together we take off the engine output flange, shim the forward end of the propellor shaft with a couple of sturdy rings (so the shaft bottoms out in there), regrind the set screws, dimple the shaft and put everything back together without having to lift Rivendell's stern out of the water. After that (including a 10-day passage to Australia in October 2008) there are no more problems.
Apologies for the longish stories. However, the main purpose is to try and make sure the same problems are unlikely to happen to any of you and -- if they did -- could be solved without first having to grope around in the dark.
Would I install the PYI dripless shaft seal again if we were to make Rivendel II ready for a major new passage?? Probably not.
Unfortunately, this is now only a retorical question since we just sold our 18-year old seahorse to an Australian couple in Brisbane.... In my next post I hope to follow up with a bit more news about that.
Fair winds;
Flying Dutchman