G
Guest
In the years since we purchased Belle-Vie in 2002, a 1991 P42, the bilge has always contained a certain amount of water; some fresh and some sea. I fixed the fresh water leak when we she was on the hard for some repairs in 2002. Check out the articles that I wrote in the Hunter Owner Modification tab above where I describe in detail how I fixed that leak.
Sea water flowed into the bilge from the stuffing box slowly dripping while underway. No big deal so I let the bilge pump scavenge the sea water overboard. The only trouble was it always left about an inch of sea water between periodic scavenge cycles; no worries.
Ever since we owned her there has always been a funky odor that would accumulate on our clothes and food. The admiral always thought it was diesel, but no leaks. Okay, so while cruising I kept scented candles, incense sticks, diffusers and other paraphernalia emanating scents to mask the odor.
Not to digress, but after the boat sat for a few weeks, the first time we used our raw water toilets the sea water had a rotten egg smell from rotting marine life in the line between the sea cock and the toilet. Again no big deal, just open the port lights during the first flush so as to diffuse the oder and all is well after that.
Finally to my point. Two weeks ago I came to the boat for some prep work before our holiday trip. While there I made an effort to remove all of the sea water from the bilge and wiped it dry. Marvel that when I opened the companion way hatch this weekend absent the familiar funky boat odor. Even my cloths smelled, duh normal. Even the bilge smelled, well nice.
Happy Holidays
Terry Cox
Sea water flowed into the bilge from the stuffing box slowly dripping while underway. No big deal so I let the bilge pump scavenge the sea water overboard. The only trouble was it always left about an inch of sea water between periodic scavenge cycles; no worries.
Ever since we owned her there has always been a funky odor that would accumulate on our clothes and food. The admiral always thought it was diesel, but no leaks. Okay, so while cruising I kept scented candles, incense sticks, diffusers and other paraphernalia emanating scents to mask the odor.
Not to digress, but after the boat sat for a few weeks, the first time we used our raw water toilets the sea water had a rotten egg smell from rotting marine life in the line between the sea cock and the toilet. Again no big deal, just open the port lights during the first flush so as to diffuse the oder and all is well after that.
Finally to my point. Two weeks ago I came to the boat for some prep work before our holiday trip. While there I made an effort to remove all of the sea water from the bilge and wiped it dry. Marvel that when I opened the companion way hatch this weekend absent the familiar funky boat odor. Even my cloths smelled, duh normal. Even the bilge smelled, well nice.
Happy Holidays
Terry Cox