dfogal
Well-known member
- Joined
- Aug 7, 2019
- Messages
- 88
- Fluid Motion Model
- C-30 S
- Hull Identification Number
- FMLT2918L415
- Vessel Name
- As You Wish
Hi All:
Ranger Tug 29-S 2015 here.
This spring I took the boat out for its first little spring shakedown cruise. The sonar was doing ‘sawtooth’ images and was unable to resolve the depth under the boat. On my boat the transducer is bonded to the hull behind the generator shelf at the back of the boat but in front of the thruster.
Many of the original components on the boat are getting harder to source and the Garmin In-Hull P79 (or Airmar P79) is now a special order item at most boating stores. The transducer is a NMEA 2000 device. It’s like a metal hockey puck. There is a black plastic cup that is mounted to the hull. The cup is filled with coolant and the metal sensor is immersed in the liquid and the cup and sensor are screwed together. The transducer makes sound, the coolant carries the sound to the hull, the sound penetrates the hull into the water below the boat.
The diagnostic tree identified by research was - update the software on the chart plotter, open the cup by removing the screws and check that the fluid is still there (if not you fill it and seal it), check that the sensor is operating, check that all the grounds to your chart plotter are working.
In my case we opened the sensor cup and the fluid level was low. We topped it up and sealed it and the transducer is working. Note that if you operate the sensor with low fluid for too long, then the sensor can burn out from the heat. It can apparently put out 600W so maybe 1/3 the heat of a hair dryer. It’s a lot. I use an infrared camera on the boat and it’s very easy to see this.
I thought I would share my repair stories as a start-to-finish in case it helps others.
Ranger Tug 29-S 2015 here.
This spring I took the boat out for its first little spring shakedown cruise. The sonar was doing ‘sawtooth’ images and was unable to resolve the depth under the boat. On my boat the transducer is bonded to the hull behind the generator shelf at the back of the boat but in front of the thruster.
Many of the original components on the boat are getting harder to source and the Garmin In-Hull P79 (or Airmar P79) is now a special order item at most boating stores. The transducer is a NMEA 2000 device. It’s like a metal hockey puck. There is a black plastic cup that is mounted to the hull. The cup is filled with coolant and the metal sensor is immersed in the liquid and the cup and sensor are screwed together. The transducer makes sound, the coolant carries the sound to the hull, the sound penetrates the hull into the water below the boat.
The diagnostic tree identified by research was - update the software on the chart plotter, open the cup by removing the screws and check that the fluid is still there (if not you fill it and seal it), check that the sensor is operating, check that all the grounds to your chart plotter are working.
In my case we opened the sensor cup and the fluid level was low. We topped it up and sealed it and the transducer is working. Note that if you operate the sensor with low fluid for too long, then the sensor can burn out from the heat. It can apparently put out 600W so maybe 1/3 the heat of a hair dryer. It’s a lot. I use an infrared camera on the boat and it’s very easy to see this.
I thought I would share my repair stories as a start-to-finish in case it helps others.