D
David Whitworth
The location of the Racor primary fuel filter on my 33 has bugged me since the boat was new. It is hard to change it without making a mess; you can't get a good grip on it without loosening the mounting screws; the hoses are too close to the filter; it is equipped with a metal opaque bowl because of its location in the engine compartment which means you have to drain a small amount of fuel out to check for water and it is hard to get a wrench on the drain plug. Changing to a translucent plastic bowl at that location is not advisable.This winter I have moved the filter to the stern alongside the fuel tank - see photo.The bracket is a 16" by 8" piece of 3/4" ply encapsulated in epoxy. Two stainless clamps hold it to the rudder post and the other end is screwed down to the fuel tank support through a small plywood cleat. I cut away the center of the bracket so that I can get a good grip on the filter cartridge at changeover time. For the same reason I also replaced one of the fittings so that the input hose approaches the filter horizontally. Note that it is located as low down as possible below the fuel level so that it feeds by gravity after a filter change - as long as the tank is 1/4 full. Bleeding the system after installation was not not noticably longer because of the longer run from the filter.Just being able to see through the bowl makes it worth it.Costs in Canadian Dollars:New plastic bowl: $4211 feet fuel hose (9.5 feet would have sufficed): $25Stainless clamps, mounting bolts, new fitting: $7Plywood and epoxy: I had these in the workshop anyway.Most difficult part of the job? Dropping the tiny vent plug from the filter and seeing it disappear into the bilge below the under-berth compartments (where it cannot be seen or touched by hand). Finding that a new vent plug was a specialty item that would take ten days to deliver and then cost a whopping $8.50. Spending 45 minutes with a small rare-earth magnet taped to the end of a long wire, fishing "blind" in the bilge. Best part of the job? The little "click" when the magnet found the plug . . .