| Title: | SAILING |
| Notice: | Please read Note 2.* before participating in this conference |
| Moderator: | UNIFIX::BERENS |
| Created: | Wed Jul 01 1992 |
| Last Modified: | Mon Jun 02 1997 |
| Last Successful Update: | Fri Jun 06 1997 |
| Number of topics: | 2299 |
| Total number of notes: | 20724 |
Last week we had the Mid Atlantic boat show here in Virginia Beach
and I was surprised at the number of manufactures who have gone
to the Marlan(spelling??) seacocks.
Has anyone had experience with these? What are the comments from
the yards on their use?
I am getting ready to haul in a couple of weeks and intend to replace
the gate valves with real seacocks. The cost of the Marlan is making
that option very attractive.
| T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 752.1 | 'plastic fitting failures.......' | THEPOD::PEASE_DAVE | I said Id have to think about it | Fri Feb 26 1988 09:20 | 17 |
I was taking a close look at a COMPAC 27 while it was on shore. I was taking a close look and found 4 'platic' thru hull fittings below the water line in the stern. 2 were larger and 2 smaller. The point is that the smaller ones look different. They were because the shank had been broken off, and you could see the hull. This meant that the edge of the fiberglass hull was in direct contact with the water!!. I figured that the installer had used the same tension on all of them and the smaller broke!!. This was a 'new' boat in the dealer's yard that they had sailed from Blue Hill bay to Portland Me. for a boat show and more. I figure that if in a couple of years, if they still hadn't sold it, I'd might make them an offer as a used boat contigent on a survey, especially of the engine installation. I'd replace those thru hull fittings with bronze before I'd even take a ride in that sucker!! Dave | |||||
| 752.2 | see note 273 | PDPSRV::BERENS | Alan Berens | Fri Feb 26 1988 09:23 | 3 |
see note 273 | |||||
| 752.3 | 3D::GINGER | Fri Feb 26 1988 13:26 | 7 | ||
Why not plastic seacocks? the rest of the boat is plastic!
:-)
"If God meant us to have plastic boats he/she would have planted
plastic trees"
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| 752.4 | one more logical step | PDPSRV::BERENS | Alan Berens | Fri Feb 26 1988 13:36 | 6 |
re .3: Carrying your logic one step further would dictate that wooden boats should have wooden seacocks. There ain't no bronze trees either! | |||||
| 752.5 | Marelon is Okay for some Uses | SALEM::MCWILLIAMS | Fri Feb 26 1988 13:45 | 36 | |
I was the one who originally entered in note 273. I eventually did
install Marelon (Mare as in Sea, and Lon for Nylon) seacocks and
through hulls. Marelon material is a glass filled nylon composite,
that has the following advantages;
Inexpensive
Good Strength to weight ratio
They have the following disadvantages;
Poor High Temp performance
UV sensitivity, unless they are filled with a UV Blocker
Less Strength than Bronze.
So it all depends on your application. If we are talking about
installing them on a 'blue water' cruiser go first class and buy
bronze. If we are talking about a 25' coastal cruiser like mine, go
with Marelon, since the Marelon will hold up as well as the rest
of the boat.
As Ed said don't use them on any hot water line, Nylon is not meant
to take high heat for an extended period of time (but you can boil
them with no problem - the problem is that at boiling they will
plastically deform under load).
The important thing is to mount them properly with adequate backing
plates, and in a location where they won't get hit if you ground or run
into the dock. You might also think about having only one water inlet,
and mount the outlet above/or at the waterline. This would limit your
liability if something would ever fail (the fewer holes below the
waterline the better).
To sum it all up, your application is the key.
/jim
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| 752.6 | DO IT WITH BRONZE | VBV01::HJOHNSON | Fri Mar 18 1988 16:40 | 13 | |
I went into Boat US and selected a 1 1/2 Marelon valve and took
it to the counter. The rep promply told me he had used them, but
replaced them after one had split wide open. I looked at the valve
and noticed it had no drain hole and figured that could be a reason
for it to split in freezing water.
I put back the Marelon.
I had the boat hauled Wednesday and stayed with bronze. That was
the good choice; the bad choice was the day for the haul and the
eight mile sail in 27 degrees and 30 knots of NW wind. It is usually
spring by now in the Chesapeake.
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