- Joined
- Mar 1, 2006
- Messages
- 3,027
- Reaction score
- 1,351
- Points
- 113
- Location
- Berea, KY/Cross, SC
- Model
- Seafarer
Looks like I already have a winter/spring 2020 project on the books.
I had seen some gas coming out of the garboard plug and wrote it off to residual from changing out fuel/water separator and me pulling all the old fuel lines and such from my auxiliary fuel tank install. While down in Florida the last couple of weeks, I still had a faint fuel smell, nothing like last year with the auxiliary tank leaking. Anyway, while down there after running in the GOM on a couple of bumpy days, I noticed my bilge pump was running when I shut down at the sandbar, the float switch had turned it on. Strange, as no water was coming out.
I just pulled my bait tank and found the switch was no longer connected to it's mount in the bilge. The mount and the base of the switch have melted from sitting in fuel, evidently quite a while. So saying all that, looks like the main tank will be coming out for replacement this winter. Guess I should have pulled it to verify it's condition on the bottom, but I took a chance and seems I lost.
On the bright side, after this and a repower down the road, I'll have a brand new 2004 228, nothing else left!!
I had seen some gas coming out of the garboard plug and wrote it off to residual from changing out fuel/water separator and me pulling all the old fuel lines and such from my auxiliary fuel tank install. While down in Florida the last couple of weeks, I still had a faint fuel smell, nothing like last year with the auxiliary tank leaking. Anyway, while down there after running in the GOM on a couple of bumpy days, I noticed my bilge pump was running when I shut down at the sandbar, the float switch had turned it on. Strange, as no water was coming out.
I just pulled my bait tank and found the switch was no longer connected to it's mount in the bilge. The mount and the base of the switch have melted from sitting in fuel, evidently quite a while. So saying all that, looks like the main tank will be coming out for replacement this winter. Guess I should have pulled it to verify it's condition on the bottom, but I took a chance and seems I lost.
On the bright side, after this and a repower down the road, I'll have a brand new 2004 228, nothing else left!!