MM: Doesn't matter if your floor is sealed if scuppers are under water and they fail. they let in more and more water, and sooner or later the boat is swamped... even if the bilge is bone dry.
Guys, interesting point the rebuilder brought up yesterday. He said he was going to put a slight crown in the deck, highest forward to aft down the centerline of course, so that water on the deck naturally drains to the sides and then to the stern.Like a football field, pretty basic I guess, but yours truly dum-dum didn't think of that.
Quote from: "LilRichard"MM: Doesn't matter if your floor is sealed if scuppers are under water and they fail. they let in more and more water, and sooner or later the boat is swamped... even if the bilge is bone dry.I have to ask- have you ever seen this happen? My thinking is the only way this could happen is either your entire floor deck is below the waterline, or the incoming water would have to travel uphill.
Quote from: "MarshMarlowe196"Quote from: "LilRichard"MM: Doesn't matter if your floor is sealed if scuppers are under water and they fail. they let in more and more water, and sooner or later the boat is swamped... even if the bilge is bone dry.I have to ask- have you ever seen this happen? My thinking is the only way this could happen is either your entire floor deck is below the waterline, or the incoming water would have to travel uphill. That's exactly the problem, many of our boats have the floor at or barely above the waterline (hence, the scuppers are below), and as water comes in it fills the rear, lowering the boat more... and on and on. Not to mention that ANY thruhull below waterline should ALWAYS have a valve on it. I have not personally seen a boat sink, but I have read about them going down for this reason on Classic Mako.If you feel comfortable leaving your boat in the water with scuppers under (and no failsafe like a seacock, plug, etc), that's fine... I never would.
I pretty much consider this guy the expert of all things boat design related:http://www.yachtsurvey.com/sinking.htm"To check if your cockpit scuppers are safe, first measure the height above the normal water line with tanks full. Subtract 2" if they're near empty. If the height above water is less than 4" you've got a problem. Get three 150 lb. or more persons to stand in one aft corner. Does the cockpit begin to flood with water? If so, your boat is in danger of sinking and you should consider sealing up the scuppers and improving the bilge pump capacity if necessary. "
Thank you! Now lets move on...
Well that pretty much makes the majority of all self-bailing boats in danger of sinking. I guess seeing is believing.