Was it a missing raw water drain plug that sank our boat?

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  • SkiTundra
    replied
    Thanks for the Simple Green tip. I use to use that a lot and had totally forgotten about it.

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  • scottb7
    replied
    the plug is fine, they don't go in too far, cause of the corrosion build up...if it snug you fine...i just tried to get mine in equal amount each year, so it didn't get less and less...
    Last edited by scottb7; 06-04-2021, 08:19 PM.

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  • kylant
    replied
    i would not touch that plug after the dealer did the work on it. if there is an issue, it's on them. if you touch it, it's on you.
    for cleaning up the gas, i use Simple Green. seems to do a good job

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  • SkiTundra
    replied
    Thanks. That's comforting.

    Originally posted by hal2814 View Post
    2. I have no idea. Looks like morning condensation to me.
    It seems to be petrol based on slickness and smell on my finger. And photo was taken about 7pm w/ 90°f temps. :-)
    Last edited by SkiTundra; 06-04-2021, 10:59 AM.

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  • hal2814
    replied
    1. Plug looks fine. Mine never goes all the way in. Watch it while running for leaks if you don’t trust it. If you’re really worried you can take a 1/2 ratchet without a socket on it and try to tighten it.

    2. I have no idea. Looks like morning condensation to me.

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  • SkiTundra
    replied
    A related question - what's the best/safest way to clean the gas off w/ the boat in the water? Would something like Dr Bonners work?

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  • SkiTundra
    replied

    I dropped the boat off at Marinemax on Saturday morning. Got a call from Scott (new service mgr) on Tue morning that techs were checking everything and then they'd detail the interior and bring it back to me (a huge stress reliever given my schedule this week). Brought it back on Wed afternoon. Overall I think pretty good. A couple of questions though:

    1) The plug doesn't appear to be in as far as I'd normally expect
    2) There's a strong gas smell and what appear to be gas flows on the side. This could be overflow from when I filled it last week but I had a paper rag in it so I'd think it wouldn't have left this much of stains (and I'd typically have wiped it down if I'd noticed it) and that the smell would have dissipated by now (9 days later).

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  • SilentSeven
    replied
    Originally posted by SkiTundra View Post
    That's a good point about the rust. I wonder if that happened and was causing problems getting it back in resulting in delay and then forgetting to do it.
    The surface rust is not a problem...it's the corrosion that eats the threads out of the housing. From the photo - but it's hard to tell - it does look like there is some damage to the cast iron threading. The easy way to test is to run your finger around the inside of the hole. If the bottom feels different than the top, you have some damage. But..if the plug has been left out before then it might not (all) be from this event.

    Water, air and cast iron a not a good mix. :/ By keeping the brass plug in the port, you pretty much block all 3.

    To stop all the issues with removing / reinstalling plugs, I've replaced all my manifold and block drain plugs with these ball valves. Just flip the valve, out it drains. Flip again...closed. Simple. The manifold drain would likely fit that v-drive plug.

    https://skidim.com/easy-drain-engine-block.html

    https://skidim.com/easy-drain-elbow-drain-pcm-ford.html

    https://skidim.com/easy-drain-exhaust-manifold.html




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  • MN Ryan
    replied
    Yikes. I may avoid MM Rogers based on that. I had Midwest Mastercraft winterize last year just because I've been treated well by them in the past.

    Good luck!

    Sent from my SM-G970U using Tapatalk

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  • scottb7
    replied
    Wow, sorry to hear that story. Maybe for a different reason I agree with SilentSeven.

    While there is a lot of different opinions, my personal "best practice" for winterizing was to immediatly after draining replace the plugs. In the moment I thought about leaving them out thru the winter for water to continue to drain or whatever. But I thought, nope, I going to put it all back together while I am right there and remember where each goes.

    swatguy is right about mitigating in the moment, to mitigate problem in short term.

    I would add that again best practice for me was to verify everything was ok when re-commisioning was to always use fake a lake or fresh water flush in driveway before dropping into the lake. And ALSO, first time in the lake to stay right next to the dock until reach normal operating temperature, checking bilge for water, and taking a good look at the strainer bowl to be sure it looks like water flowing thru.
    Last edited by scottb7; 05-30-2021, 09:11 AM.

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  • Smindustries
    replied
    Dang, man, I'm sorry to hear about that.

    I almost suffered similar incident. My boat is a Coastal, so the plug is an anode. I found the plug laying in the keel, with a thread from the V-drive casing stuck to it. In my case, the factory didn't thread the case deep enough. It's a NPT fastener, so it's tapered. They didn't cut the hole deep enough for the fastener to fully seat. I had to cut threads much deeper than theirs to get it to seat well.

    The boat had one season and 82 hours on it.

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    Last edited by Smindustries; 05-29-2021, 06:37 PM.

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  • swatguy
    replied
    Wow. That’s definitely on the dealership to make right is they were the ones I charge of winterizing and getting ready. That’s a scary location for water to start rasping into the hull from. Just heads up for anyone reading this. A quick way to solve the water risking in would’ve been to close the main raw water intake valve on the hull. Yes you’ll have to **** her down. But you’ll stay afloat.

    That plug should be the plug for that v drive. If not it’s identical to that. That’s one of the most common overlooked drainage spots for v drive systems.

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  • SkiTundra
    replied
    That's a good point about the rust. I wonder if that happened and was causing problems getting it back in resulting in delay and then forgetting to do it.

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  • SilentSeven
    replied
    In some ways...here's what's worse. If you leave a plug out of a cast iron part over an extended period, water can drip out the plug hole rusting out the threads and damaging or even ruining the casing. When I pull my plugs, I let the unit drain and then replace to prevent this from happening.

    I would carefully inspect that drain hole for damage. If fubar, I'd make a case they need to swap the drive.

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  • Schlanseay
    replied
    Agreed there is no excuse for that.


    Sent from my iPhone using Tapatalk

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