Should be simple matter to drill holes between them.
I'll let you know how that goes.
D'oh! Should have gone West instead of East.beene wrote:BTW
I'm slipped in at Lakefront Promenade this season
Gas bar is open
Cheers
G
The bilge gets an inch or two of water while still in the harbor.Starscream wrote:A mystery indeed! If it's tea coloured that suggests old water that's been on board for a while. Maybe a cup of bleach into the bilges?
I would plug all three drain holes and fill up the two sinks and the cockpit well. At 30 degrees one of the sink drain holes might be under water.
I don't think it's the ballast tank. That's under the water line, I think, so if you opened the transom valve and vent at the dock your boat would sink if there was a leak in the tank, wouldn't it?
One sink, right? The head has no sink.Tomfoolery wrote:Did you eyeball the two thru-hull connections from the basins? Those are pretty close to the water, and even just walking around on the boat will potentially put them under water.
Mine has one in the head. I thought they all did. And that one is easy to check, because the thru-hull is right inside the little cabinet it's part of. I store my coiled fresh water hose in there, which is about all that little space is good for.DaveC426913 wrote:One sink, right? The head has no sink.Tomfoolery wrote:Did you eyeball the two thru-hull connections from the basins? Those are pretty close to the water, and even just walking around on the boat will potentially put them under water.
I would be very surprised to find tea-coloured water if coming in fresh from the through hull. But I'll check it.
No fast motoring. Also, no trailering. This is out of the slip. And sailing.MikeFloutier wrote: If the X is anything like this it may be a factor. I guess when motoring fast the stern gets more submerged which may be doing it.