RAW WATER INTAKE

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Sep 25, 2006
6
- - Oak Harbor, Wa.
I continually pickup eel grass which frequently blocks/limits raw water intake and caauses overheating. Any ideas on how to block entry at the intake?
 
F

Fred

There's a fitting we used to call a "clamshell"

made of bronze, sort of a flat oval with slots cut out of most of the flat part. A flange around the base holds four small screws. It goes over the raw water intake. I have installed them on lots of boats that I've owned. Maybe a Wilcox Crittendon item?
 
B

Benny

You should fit a strainer.

A clamshell should be your first line of defense but in addition you should fit a strainer in the intake hose. It will be easier to clean a strainer than the whole raw water cooling system. Last time our engine sucked weeds we had them up all the way into the thermostat.
 
Jun 2, 2004
27
Hunter 28 Burlington, ON
Strainer -Yes!

Any weed within twenty-five feet of my H28 is immediately attracted to my fresh water intake. Fortunately, a strainer is installed in the fresh water line to the motor so the problem is kept from the engine itself. I have learned to recognize the change in the sound of the exhaust when the fresh water intake is blocked. At that point it is a matter of: stop the engine, shut off the thru-hull, clean the filter, open the thru-hull and if no water flows remove the hose between the filter and thru-hull, using the #14 solid copper wire kept by the thru-hull remove any weed in the hose and in the thru-hull itself, and finally open the thru-hull. My friends have suggested the "clamshell". I have resisted installing the "clamshell". I feel that with it installed weed could clog the clamshell itself as well as making it difficult to clean out the thru-hull if it became clogged along with the clogged clamshell. I would rather not have to go diving on the clamshell to clear it. As part of spring fitting out (in about three weeks) I will also install an engine temperature gauge with readout in the cockpit.
 
Dec 3, 2003
2,101
Hunter Legend 37 Portsmouth, RI
Happenned to me, too!

In 2002, I took the boat to Maine for the summer. During that time, I clogged up 5 times while cruising there. There is a lot of seaweed debris in Maine, with all the currents & stuff. The following summer, I clogged up while charging batterries. Only this time it was a jellyfish. That was the last straw! On haulout, I bought a clamshell-integrated thru-hull and have been lucky if a single blade of grass has made it in during the last 3 seasons.
 
Feb 10, 2004
4,134
Hunter 40.5 Warwick, RI
I replaced my clamshell-integrated thru-hull

with a standard thru-hull and one of these hinged external strainers. The problem with the integrated unit is that you can't get inside the thru-hull to clean out any barnacles that grow in there. I just didn't like it. I had it on my A/C intake and it did keep the weeds out, but it was the cleaning issue that caused me to replace it.
 
Dec 2, 2003
4,245
- - Seabeck WA
I installed mine about 19 years ago.

No problem since. I bought a basket-style that looks like the one in Rich's picture but it's held over the through-hull with 3 screws. No attached through-hull = cheap. I also installed one over the watermaker inlet. Perfect. Why aren't they standard equipment. The Groco strainer is loooong gone. Not needed.
 
Mar 20, 2004
1,746
Hunter 356 and 216 Portland, ME
me too!

2 years ago, after a really bad clog, I decided enough was enough! I added an external slotted cover (small screws, no hull penetration) over the engine and AC pickups, and added a diverter valve so the engine can draw from either inlet-not a clog since!
 
Jun 4, 2004
834
Hunter 340 Forked River, NJ
One more thing

I agree with the advice about installing a clamshell screen over the water intake. My additional advice is to install it with the slots facing aft. I have used this strategy on two boats I have owned over the past 15 years and almost never pick-up any eel grass over the whole season. We sail in the Barnegat Bay region of New Jersey and there is lots and lots of grass.
 
Dec 3, 2003
2,101
Hunter Legend 37 Portsmouth, RI
Slots Back!

I agree that the slots should be turned aft. This has worked for me. Before I started the project, I walked around the boatyard in winter time to check this out. Boats had them going either way. Most forward-oriented were on AC intake, but not the raw water intake. Many had the round, perforated disk on the AC units, also. I had even ran the question as a post on this forum (check the archives) and didn't really get a firm answer. Even the boat yard couldn't give me a firm answer. But the majority of the boats had the raw water intakes aft-oriented. Made sense, so I did it that way. Works fine.
 
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