What a difference a day makes. Yesterday, I was out on the deck in the sunshine doing sailor kind of stuff. Today, I was down in the deepest recesses of my boat’s unmentionable parts doing stuff you couldn’t pay a plumber to do.
This is the bilge sump in the aft end of the keel. It’s about a foot long and six inches deep behind the second fuel tank installed in the keel ahead of it.
The red cable is the gear shift and the plywood pad just visible is set into the structural glass on top of the fuel tank for mounting the two high level bilge pumps. The sink, icebox, and shower drains go into this sump which is emptied by a small bilge pump with an integral float switch. The same pump handles any incidental water such stuffing box leakage and condensation. It’s a system which has worked out very well in practice and never caused any odor. I keep a plastic strainer basket stuck over the end of the galley sink drain to collect any food waste that gets down the drain.
The indentation at the top of the picture is a sub sump for the manual diaphragm bilge pump hose which has a foot check valve on it. Centrifugal pumps should never have check valves BTW.
There is no structural problem but the layers of glass I lined the sump with as a backup barrier to protect the structural glass work succumbed to the witches brew of hot water, soap, bilge cleaner, and oil. They began to separate and peel away from the hull structure. I forgot to take a photo but it was quite a mess with softened glass flaps hanging into the sump.
Although the sump is only six inches deep, the bottom is just reachable with the tips of my fingers and access is normally blocked by the primary fuel filter and pump as well as the bilge pump hoses. So, once again, I am at Waterman ‘s Wharf with my boat disabled. I had to disassemble the fuel system and plug the hoses with machine screws. It was also necessary to disconnect all the bilge hoses. The galley sink now drains through the engine cooling water through hull and the ice box melt water drains into the wine bottle just visible at the top of the picture.
After getting all that apart, I went at it with a box cutter knife and cut out all the loose fiberglass and did an initial cleaning. That’s enough for one day. Tomorrow, I’ll clean and grind to try and get down to a surface that will take a new epoxy and glass liner. The new glass will go completely around the sump so there is only one edge showing and the whole thing is mechanically locked into place. Since that edge will be epoxy on epoxy instead of epoxy on old polyester, it should hold. Doing fiberglass work at arm’s length in this tight space should be enough to make one take up stamp collecting.
So, you want to be a yachtsman, do you?
This is the bilge sump in the aft end of the keel. It’s about a foot long and six inches deep behind the second fuel tank installed in the keel ahead of it.

The red cable is the gear shift and the plywood pad just visible is set into the structural glass on top of the fuel tank for mounting the two high level bilge pumps. The sink, icebox, and shower drains go into this sump which is emptied by a small bilge pump with an integral float switch. The same pump handles any incidental water such stuffing box leakage and condensation. It’s a system which has worked out very well in practice and never caused any odor. I keep a plastic strainer basket stuck over the end of the galley sink drain to collect any food waste that gets down the drain.
The indentation at the top of the picture is a sub sump for the manual diaphragm bilge pump hose which has a foot check valve on it. Centrifugal pumps should never have check valves BTW.
There is no structural problem but the layers of glass I lined the sump with as a backup barrier to protect the structural glass work succumbed to the witches brew of hot water, soap, bilge cleaner, and oil. They began to separate and peel away from the hull structure. I forgot to take a photo but it was quite a mess with softened glass flaps hanging into the sump.
Although the sump is only six inches deep, the bottom is just reachable with the tips of my fingers and access is normally blocked by the primary fuel filter and pump as well as the bilge pump hoses. So, once again, I am at Waterman ‘s Wharf with my boat disabled. I had to disassemble the fuel system and plug the hoses with machine screws. It was also necessary to disconnect all the bilge hoses. The galley sink now drains through the engine cooling water through hull and the ice box melt water drains into the wine bottle just visible at the top of the picture.
After getting all that apart, I went at it with a box cutter knife and cut out all the loose fiberglass and did an initial cleaning. That’s enough for one day. Tomorrow, I’ll clean and grind to try and get down to a surface that will take a new epoxy and glass liner. The new glass will go completely around the sump so there is only one edge showing and the whole thing is mechanically locked into place. Since that edge will be epoxy on epoxy instead of epoxy on old polyester, it should hold. Doing fiberglass work at arm’s length in this tight space should be enough to make one take up stamp collecting.
So, you want to be a yachtsman, do you?