Hydraulicjump
Well-known member
- Joined
- Feb 10, 2011
- Messages
- 646
- Fluid Motion Model
- C-30 CB
- Hull Identification Number
- FMLT2911F415
- Non-Fluid Motion Model
- Necky Looksha VII, Liquidlogic Remix, Jackson 4Fun
- Vessel Name
- La Barka (2015)
We all share our problems and our fixes. My problem was a leaking secondary fuel filter on the Yanmar 4BY 180 engine. When we did our 250 hour service, the mechanic noted a little bit of fuel on the outside of the secondary fuel filter. Since I had a spare, we swapped it out. I watched as he tightened it by hand as hard as he could (no tools), the way my father taught me to tighten oil filters.
Seemed OK when we tested the boat, but then it began weeping fuel a bit later. Over the phone the mechanic said he had trouble with Yanmar filters before and thought the gasket was suspect. I ordered a replacement and in the meantime, under his instruction, I got a filter wrench and tightened it another 1/3-1/2 turns. Then we left for Bellingham.
When I ran the boat in Bellingham before our two week cruise, it was clearly leaking (nothing like a fuel leak on the day of departure). Fortunately, I noticed a mechanic working on a Ranger Tug nearby and decided to chat him up. Sure enough, he confirmed that the gaskets on the Yanmar secondary fuel filters are sketchy. His advice was to break the rules and crank the filter on as tight as I could without collapsing it.
I did, and it worked. No leaks for the whole two week trip. But I am dreading having to remove the thing someday having cranked it on so hard.
Simple fix, maybe.
Jeff
p.s., we brought the boat back to northern California to go watch the Americas Cup races. I don't know how many of you saw the film clip of Team Oracle making a hard turn upwind in a match race against the other Oracle boat. One of their rudders snapped clean off, broken by the force of the turn. It bobbed up to the surface with a most clear insignia on it saying "Yanmar". Ouch. If you haven't watched this stuff, go to YouTube. For all us former sailors, this is fun stuff.
Seemed OK when we tested the boat, but then it began weeping fuel a bit later. Over the phone the mechanic said he had trouble with Yanmar filters before and thought the gasket was suspect. I ordered a replacement and in the meantime, under his instruction, I got a filter wrench and tightened it another 1/3-1/2 turns. Then we left for Bellingham.
When I ran the boat in Bellingham before our two week cruise, it was clearly leaking (nothing like a fuel leak on the day of departure). Fortunately, I noticed a mechanic working on a Ranger Tug nearby and decided to chat him up. Sure enough, he confirmed that the gaskets on the Yanmar secondary fuel filters are sketchy. His advice was to break the rules and crank the filter on as tight as I could without collapsing it.
I did, and it worked. No leaks for the whole two week trip. But I am dreading having to remove the thing someday having cranked it on so hard.
Simple fix, maybe.
Jeff
p.s., we brought the boat back to northern California to go watch the Americas Cup races. I don't know how many of you saw the film clip of Team Oracle making a hard turn upwind in a match race against the other Oracle boat. One of their rudders snapped clean off, broken by the force of the turn. It bobbed up to the surface with a most clear insignia on it saying "Yanmar". Ouch. If you haven't watched this stuff, go to YouTube. For all us former sailors, this is fun stuff.