bsangs
E35-3 - New Jersey
"Radiance" has a Yanmar 3GM30F engine that runs to a six-gallon Whale F600 hot water heater under the cockpit. Aside from winterizing the Whale, have never really paid much attention to it, since in the immortal words of Steve Jobs, "It just works." Well, it did just work anyway. Now it's leaking from the corner. Not sure if from old age, or me having screwed up the winterization.
Anyway, what it's leaking is engine coolant. Aft bilge compartment was pink and tasted sweet, which made NO sense to me, as I use blue non-tox antifreeze for winterizing. There was nothing dripping below the engine on the absorbent pads I keep in place. So kept going further aft and noticed pink dripping from the lower front right corner of the hot water tank. At this point I'll admit to being completely flummoxed, but after a deep dive into the engine/water heater relationship, I now understand their dynamic regarding the coolant loop.
Seems like a simple (Ha!) cut and paste replacement with the same Whale model, so am not really fretting the work. That leads to my question - until I replace the Whale, could I just couple the input and output hoses of the water tank to "complete the circuit," so to speak? I've read about people removing their hot water tanks and capping the engines, but that's more of a permanent solution. I'm just looking for something temporary that'll allow me to use the engine if I don't replace the tank promptly. However, I'm not at all sure if that's safe to try, so thought I'd see if anyone here has done it.
Anyway, what it's leaking is engine coolant. Aft bilge compartment was pink and tasted sweet, which made NO sense to me, as I use blue non-tox antifreeze for winterizing. There was nothing dripping below the engine on the absorbent pads I keep in place. So kept going further aft and noticed pink dripping from the lower front right corner of the hot water tank. At this point I'll admit to being completely flummoxed, but after a deep dive into the engine/water heater relationship, I now understand their dynamic regarding the coolant loop.
Seems like a simple (Ha!) cut and paste replacement with the same Whale model, so am not really fretting the work. That leads to my question - until I replace the Whale, could I just couple the input and output hoses of the water tank to "complete the circuit," so to speak? I've read about people removing their hot water tanks and capping the engines, but that's more of a permanent solution. I'm just looking for something temporary that'll allow me to use the engine if I don't replace the tank promptly. However, I'm not at all sure if that's safe to try, so thought I'd see if anyone here has done it.