Engine compartment "shelf"

FlyMeAway

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 1, 2020
Messages
544
Fluid Motion Model
C-302 SC
Vessel Name
Beagle
For those without the generator, the engine compartment has a large shelf/platform aft.

Leaving loose things on this platform seems risky, as anything that gets dislodged / isn't fully secured while underway runs the risk of falling on the engine shaft. Bad news.

Have other owners built higher walls, tiedowns, or other means of securing items on this shelf/platform? What do other owners use this space for?
 
Not exactly the same because C30 here. What I did is get some large collapsible plastic bins that were measured to nearly fill the area. Then mounted 2" stainless brackets that they would fit inside and hold them in place. Put dry deck tiles below for air flow. Has worked perfectly to hold many random things like lines, oil rags, a bucket, etc.
 
I also don’t have a generator, and find that shelf to be highly useful storage space. My use of it varies a lot, based on what kind of boating I’m doing.

On longer cruises, I have used the shelf to store watertight boxes with spare parts and odd-ball tools, plus containers with extra rope and lines, an extra fender, etc. The containers were packed in reasonably well and I did not secure them. None of them moved around much if at all, even after some choppy cruising.

For day trips and shorter weekend excursions, I sometimes leave an extra fender down there, and maybe a small container of spare parts. At those times, things are not packed in tightly and there is room for them to move about. But they have always seemed to stay put.

For short day trips, often the shelf is mostly empty. All that is on it is what I always keep there — the things I use to check fluids before every outing. That amounts to nothing other than some quartered blue paper towels for checking engine and transmission oil, an oil absorbent pad or two, and a small wastebasket to throw the blue paper towels into after checking fluids. Those things are all super light, but they never move much. Now that I think about it, I’m not sure they ever move at all. The ultra-light waste basket is always to the far port side of the shelf when I leave as well as when I return.

All of that is to say that, in my experience, that area does not seem subject to much tossing and movement. Maybe that’s because it is the most heavily ballasted part of the boat. Everything rides well without much effort on my part to make that happen, So in my experience, putting things there hasn’t proven risky. But I do think through what I put there because it is a distinct “environment” (the air there is a mix of damp from the bilge but warm from the engine). So parts, etc, go into watertight containers. But other than that, using it for storage hasn’t required a lot of extra precautions.

Gini
 
Thanks! I want to put things there without tying them down, but I worry that a failure and a fall forward would be catastrophic underway?
 
Same here, I have never noticed anything moving there in 2 years. I would worry most about movement when rolling but I think simple precautions should be sufficient.
 
We have R31 on order in the NW edition. So we will not have the generator. I plan on making some kind of storage in place of it. I would love to be able to put a crab pot there but will see. My concern is not really the engine shaft side but aft to the rudder arm. Definitely don’t want anything caught there and lose steering.
 
I agree with making sure nothing stored on the shelf might shift aft and interfere with the rudder arm and steerage. I have added a rudder indicator, so I've got some added mechanical trappings back there. More than anything else, the aft shower hose seems to be the thing that wants to get in the way. I keep thinking that, someday, I'll figure out something so that it can be pulled out and slid back in with confidence it won't hang up on the steerage gear. I use the shower so rarely, though, that doing that hasn't been high on my "to do" list. 😉

Gini
 
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