Just went through this and see next to nothing here on the forum I thought I'd post in case someone else is thinking about doing this.
Sold my 2009 H36 and one of the conditions of sale was to replace the Sea-Fire automatic extinguisher in the engine bay. Surprisingly it was actually reading high (see photos), which no one (Sea-Fire, the surveyor or my broker) could explain. Possibly a bad gauge, but worrisome. I had noticed it previously but it had always read at that level and I couldn't find anyone to test/weigh/tag it. The model number for the extinguisher is a white tag on the right side of the fire extinguisher as you look at the gauge (see photo - mine was an FG 50A model). You need to replace it with the same model and that tag is the only place with that information.
You can find the bottles online (e.g. Go2Marine, etc.) and you'll find the prices for a new bottle pretty dear. Mine ranged from $300-$800 online depending on where I looked. Plus hazmat shipping. Pacificfireandmarine.com seemed to have the best prices, but didn't see how much their hazmat shipping was.
The bottle removed painlessly, but you have to cut the wires going to the engine control panel and then rejoin them when you reinstall. Otherwise I believe the engine won't start without an override. Polarity doesn't matter. Mine didn't have a manual pull, so that may complicate things more.
After looking online, and needing a bottle quickly (within a few days), I contacted Sea-Fire in Baltimore, which is ~50 miles from where the boat is on the hard in MD. They were pretty responsive, but I recommend calling a customer service person on the phone once you get an e-mail response. They are pretty knowledgeable and helpful. Once I provided a photo of the tag and the gauge they indicated that my extinguisher (circa 2009) wasn't refillable, but they had the replacement bottles in stock (some they have to order). They took my old bottle and disposed of it, and replaced it with a new one for $495 in one day. While it appeared I could find it cheaper online I couldn't have gotten it in time to close on the boat, and the final charges with hazmat and fedex would've probably added up to more than what I paid to get it directly from Sea-Fire. Sea-Fire says that that bottle is good "for life" as long as the pressure stays in the green. Practically speaking you're still gonna get dinged if its tag doesn't show its been inspected, is my guess.
What I haven't been able to find is someone who will come out and weigh and tag the engine extinguisher. Sea-Fire doesn't have a recommendation, and any surveyor (or Coast Guard boarding team) is going to look at that tag and say it needs to be inspected and certified, which means it needs to be either removed and weighed, or weighed in-situ. Good luck with either of those for engine bay fire extinguishers. Would love to hear anyone else's thoughts on that front.
One last thought here. If you look on West Marine's site you'll see a Sea-Fire automatic suppression bottle for a WHOLE lot less - like $85. It is a different fire suppression gas (3M’s Novec® 1230) than the FM200 in the extinguisher I replaced. Both are gas, and (relatively) safe around humans (unlike the Halon they replaced) and used in the same application. Neither is harmful to the engine or electronics (or a mess to clean up). Would love to hear from someone knowledgable in this area, but they look to be for identical purposes and one costs 1/5 of the other for seemingly the same capability. Sea-Fire sells them both for the same application. I'll be looking into the Novec 1230 for $85 next time I need to replace a bottle and aren't up against a survey and time crunch. The cylinder for the Novec 1230 may need to be a little bigger to have the same effect, but otherwise looks to be better for the environment and cheaper. Here''s an info sheet on it:
Comparison of Fire Suppression Systems: FM-200 vs Novec 1230 | Control Fire Systems Blog
FYI, the only relevant thread I could find is from 2015, which gives you an eye-popping view of the price increases for the change to the more human and environmentally friendly FM200 gas used in today's automatic engine fire suppression bottles:
fire extinguishers type / difference question | Sailboat Owners Forums
Sold my 2009 H36 and one of the conditions of sale was to replace the Sea-Fire automatic extinguisher in the engine bay. Surprisingly it was actually reading high (see photos), which no one (Sea-Fire, the surveyor or my broker) could explain. Possibly a bad gauge, but worrisome. I had noticed it previously but it had always read at that level and I couldn't find anyone to test/weigh/tag it. The model number for the extinguisher is a white tag on the right side of the fire extinguisher as you look at the gauge (see photo - mine was an FG 50A model). You need to replace it with the same model and that tag is the only place with that information.
You can find the bottles online (e.g. Go2Marine, etc.) and you'll find the prices for a new bottle pretty dear. Mine ranged from $300-$800 online depending on where I looked. Plus hazmat shipping. Pacificfireandmarine.com seemed to have the best prices, but didn't see how much their hazmat shipping was.
The bottle removed painlessly, but you have to cut the wires going to the engine control panel and then rejoin them when you reinstall. Otherwise I believe the engine won't start without an override. Polarity doesn't matter. Mine didn't have a manual pull, so that may complicate things more.
After looking online, and needing a bottle quickly (within a few days), I contacted Sea-Fire in Baltimore, which is ~50 miles from where the boat is on the hard in MD. They were pretty responsive, but I recommend calling a customer service person on the phone once you get an e-mail response. They are pretty knowledgeable and helpful. Once I provided a photo of the tag and the gauge they indicated that my extinguisher (circa 2009) wasn't refillable, but they had the replacement bottles in stock (some they have to order). They took my old bottle and disposed of it, and replaced it with a new one for $495 in one day. While it appeared I could find it cheaper online I couldn't have gotten it in time to close on the boat, and the final charges with hazmat and fedex would've probably added up to more than what I paid to get it directly from Sea-Fire. Sea-Fire says that that bottle is good "for life" as long as the pressure stays in the green. Practically speaking you're still gonna get dinged if its tag doesn't show its been inspected, is my guess.
What I haven't been able to find is someone who will come out and weigh and tag the engine extinguisher. Sea-Fire doesn't have a recommendation, and any surveyor (or Coast Guard boarding team) is going to look at that tag and say it needs to be inspected and certified, which means it needs to be either removed and weighed, or weighed in-situ. Good luck with either of those for engine bay fire extinguishers. Would love to hear anyone else's thoughts on that front.
One last thought here. If you look on West Marine's site you'll see a Sea-Fire automatic suppression bottle for a WHOLE lot less - like $85. It is a different fire suppression gas (3M’s Novec® 1230) than the FM200 in the extinguisher I replaced. Both are gas, and (relatively) safe around humans (unlike the Halon they replaced) and used in the same application. Neither is harmful to the engine or electronics (or a mess to clean up). Would love to hear from someone knowledgable in this area, but they look to be for identical purposes and one costs 1/5 of the other for seemingly the same capability. Sea-Fire sells them both for the same application. I'll be looking into the Novec 1230 for $85 next time I need to replace a bottle and aren't up against a survey and time crunch. The cylinder for the Novec 1230 may need to be a little bigger to have the same effect, but otherwise looks to be better for the environment and cheaper. Here''s an info sheet on it:
Comparison of Fire Suppression Systems: FM-200 vs Novec 1230 | Control Fire Systems Blog
FYI, the only relevant thread I could find is from 2015, which gives you an eye-popping view of the price increases for the change to the more human and environmentally friendly FM200 gas used in today's automatic engine fire suppression bottles:
fire extinguishers type / difference question | Sailboat Owners Forums
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