Folks please help calm my concerns. 1992 Hunter 42 Passage. Saturday while returning from a great sail the wind died so my wife and I decided to motor sail back to our marina. We cranked up old bessie and turned on the blower to dissipate some heat and headed in. We had used the engine but not the blower when we headed out for our sail hours before. On our return after about 30 minutes of motor sailing I noticed a "hot" smell. I went below to check it out and could not determine a source or even if it was a hot spot anywhere. We continued motoring and the smell continued. I turned off the blower and motored quIte nervously into the slip. Once all was secured and the engine shut down the hot burning smell dissipated.
Recent activities include replacing the stuffing box and packing as well as a new drive plate in the transmission. I rarely use the blower and especially not for this long. The smell was not an electrical insulation smell and the alternator was on and charging without indications of any unordinary operation. I am wondering if the packing was installed and adjusted too tight would that "burn in" causing the smell. If so I wonder why the smell wasn't evident during our motoring out to sail. So my other thought is did the blower fan simply burn up. Initially when I shut it down it sounded strange but later after it cooled it sounded normal. I did not remove the sink cabinet floor to check the blower but plan to do so next weekend.
So, boat fire being a VERY SCARY thing for me, and understanding some things mechanical I wonder if this was due to 1) new stuffing box/packing, 2) burned up blower fan or bearings or 3) something electrical ( again it was not the putrid insulation smell but more like a wood burning smell).
Any advice or similar experiences I can learn from you folks would be appreciated!
Sandy
Recent activities include replacing the stuffing box and packing as well as a new drive plate in the transmission. I rarely use the blower and especially not for this long. The smell was not an electrical insulation smell and the alternator was on and charging without indications of any unordinary operation. I am wondering if the packing was installed and adjusted too tight would that "burn in" causing the smell. If so I wonder why the smell wasn't evident during our motoring out to sail. So my other thought is did the blower fan simply burn up. Initially when I shut it down it sounded strange but later after it cooled it sounded normal. I did not remove the sink cabinet floor to check the blower but plan to do so next weekend.
So, boat fire being a VERY SCARY thing for me, and understanding some things mechanical I wonder if this was due to 1) new stuffing box/packing, 2) burned up blower fan or bearings or 3) something electrical ( again it was not the putrid insulation smell but more like a wood burning smell).
Any advice or similar experiences I can learn from you folks would be appreciated!
Sandy