- Joined
- Jun 5, 2020
- Messages
- 1,288
- Reaction score
- 601
- Points
- 113
- Age
- 62
- Location
- Santa Cruz Mountains, CA
- Website
- mcvoy.com
- Model
- Seafarer
Some of you might remember that I was unimpressed with the little rubber flappers that are supposed to prevent water from coming in the scuppers.
So I put in swing check valves (pic below) but lately the starboard side one was not working, we'd be standing in water back there.
So I undid the hose clamps, put my right angle impact on the cap at the top, got that off, then undid the bolt that holds the pin in, turned the valve so that gravity wanted the pin out, banged on the valve until the pin dropped out and removed the flapper.
I undid the bolt holding the flapper on and flipped the gasket to get a good seal. Then I cleaned the mating surface and ran my finger all over the inside of the valve looking for salt.
And found the actual culprit: an 1/8 inch thick twig. I just got lucky and stuck my finger in the hose and there it was. That's what was
keeping the valve open.
Just updating you guys in case you do the same upgrade, other than the branch in there, there is nothing, no salt, no corrosion. That's about a year since I installed it. I average about 3 trips/month so the boat gets used and that valve sees salt.
So far, way more happy with that solution than the rubber flaps.
So I put in swing check valves (pic below) but lately the starboard side one was not working, we'd be standing in water back there.
So I undid the hose clamps, put my right angle impact on the cap at the top, got that off, then undid the bolt that holds the pin in, turned the valve so that gravity wanted the pin out, banged on the valve until the pin dropped out and removed the flapper.
I undid the bolt holding the flapper on and flipped the gasket to get a good seal. Then I cleaned the mating surface and ran my finger all over the inside of the valve looking for salt.
And found the actual culprit: an 1/8 inch thick twig. I just got lucky and stuck my finger in the hose and there it was. That's what was
keeping the valve open.
Just updating you guys in case you do the same upgrade, other than the branch in there, there is nothing, no salt, no corrosion. That's about a year since I installed it. I average about 3 trips/month so the boat gets used and that valve sees salt.
So far, way more happy with that solution than the rubber flaps.