One of my early decisions on renovating this old Westerly
Nomad was to use an outboard as auxiliary power. Not an outboard hung off the
transom however; I find them ugly and inefficient. Ugly because they look like
an afterthought and inefficient because, in my experience, the prop is often
lifted out of the water in any kind of a chop. Writers often refer to this as
‘cavitation’, this is not the correct term but it’s frequently used to describe
the problem.
I wanted an outboard in a well because it seemed to me I
might get the best of all worlds – a power unit, as efficient as an inboard
engine where the prop is deep enough in the water to avoid the chances of it
turning in the air at the top of every wave, allied to the lower cost of
outboard repair and maintenance. It’s always cheaper to take your unit to a
mechanic than have him visit your boat, cheaper also because he can get to the
problem without having to stick his head into the bilges or lift out the
engine.
The process of creating a well wasn’t particularly easy
because it required the rudder to be relocated and hung off the transom.
Fortunately this had already been done by a previous owner. He’d also made an
attempt at creating the well but the work hadn’t been thought through properly
and the building of the well walls left a lot to be desired. So, the whole
thing was replaced and the cockpit remodelled on the advice of a marine
engineer. Was it worth the effort?
Yes I think so, in fact you could almost argue that it has
already paid for itself. This summer we ventured under motor along the canal
that crosses Brittany linking the English
Channel with the Atlantic . It is a narrow,
shallow waterway that no longer carries commercial traffic. From the towpath it
is a beautiful ribbon of water edged with hardwood forests, ancient chateaus,
idyllic picturesque villages and pastoral scenes unchanged for hundreds of
years. From the deck of a twin keel sailing boat however, it is a muddy weed-filled
creak that tempts and then betrays the innocent navigator.
Four days into our cruise the engine began to overheat. Well
at least I could lift it out of the well and carry it shore-side where I could
work on it in relative comfort. Then, having confirmed that I had neither the
tools nor the expertise to fix the problem, I was able to phone a friend and
get the engine to a specialist engineer who ordered parts and fixed the problem
within two days. Three days later I was cruising again and the cost of the
repair was about £35. Now how much would it have been to call out the engineer
for him to diagnose the problem and then return with the appropriate parts to
fix it? I don’t know the answer but I’m pretty sure it would have been
significantly more - given that the current average hourly rate for a marine
mechanic is in the region of £30 per hour.
Something tells me I got something
right – unusual for me to do that.
Seaward
No comments:
Post a Comment
All comments are welcome, advice is particularly sought, please try to stay on subject ( within reason)