Hi - this is my first post. I'm hoping someone can give me some good advice.
I recently bought a Westsail32 which mainly has a bunch of cosmetic issues to take care of (dirty, smelly, peeling varnish). However I've noticed that whenever it rains, the engine area below the cockpit fills with a gallon or two of water. I noticed the cockpit drain hose was stiff and had a stripe going down it from water trickling. As long as it doesn't rain, the area is dry, so probably the actual drain fitting is leaking; anyway I decided to replace the hose as a first step since the old hose didn't look safe.
I cut some new hose to size and took off the old hose with the seacock closed. The seacock drips a little bit when closed and probably hasn't been greased in a long time. It's also quite green with corrosion, but doesn't look structurally damaged. When I put the new hose on, the seacock nipple loosened and could actually turn all the way around which doesn't seem right to me. I turned it a few times to see if it would tighten, but it didn't seem to be threaded.
Anyway, I clamped the hose on, opened the valve and water started pouring out - not at the hose connection, but between the nipple and the seacock. I quickly closed the seacock and used duct tape as a temporary sealing measure, then opened the valve again. I checked for drips over the next several hours and it seemed ok, but I'm not too happy about relying on duct tape in such a crucial spot...
What would be the best thing to do at this point?
One other question - is it normal for a seacock to drip a bit - or if it's greased properly will it seal completely?
I recently bought a Westsail32 which mainly has a bunch of cosmetic issues to take care of (dirty, smelly, peeling varnish). However I've noticed that whenever it rains, the engine area below the cockpit fills with a gallon or two of water. I noticed the cockpit drain hose was stiff and had a stripe going down it from water trickling. As long as it doesn't rain, the area is dry, so probably the actual drain fitting is leaking; anyway I decided to replace the hose as a first step since the old hose didn't look safe.
I cut some new hose to size and took off the old hose with the seacock closed. The seacock drips a little bit when closed and probably hasn't been greased in a long time. It's also quite green with corrosion, but doesn't look structurally damaged. When I put the new hose on, the seacock nipple loosened and could actually turn all the way around which doesn't seem right to me. I turned it a few times to see if it would tighten, but it didn't seem to be threaded.
Anyway, I clamped the hose on, opened the valve and water started pouring out - not at the hose connection, but between the nipple and the seacock. I quickly closed the seacock and used duct tape as a temporary sealing measure, then opened the valve again. I checked for drips over the next several hours and it seemed ok, but I'm not too happy about relying on duct tape in such a crucial spot...
What would be the best thing to do at this point?
One other question - is it normal for a seacock to drip a bit - or if it's greased properly will it seal completely?