Hi, I figured some of you here might be able to figure out what happened to a friend's boat that seemed to sink mysteriously. He had just put 2 brand new Mercury 4 stroke 175 HP engines on a Bayliner Trophy 26ft boat (walkaround). He asked me to go with him to test the boat and we decided to take it out to Um Almaradim island around 25 miles from shore. Everythings seemed fine although I thought that the engines seemed a little bit too back heavy because it seemed like the boat was pointed way too front high before it managed to plane. We cruised at around 32 mph and all seemed fine. We anchored about 2 miles from the island and I decided to spearfish. About two hours into my spearfishing I heard the engines rev but really didn't think anything of it. I thought maybe they were just relocating the boat. But then on one of my top checks to see my position to the boat ... there was no boat anymore. So after an hour or so I figured something serious must have happened and decided to swim to the island. Needless to say it was a tough swim because the tide was quite strong and I even thought of ditching my spearfishing gear and fish ... but that was not necessary and I managed to get there. Once there I found out that my friend had noticed that the boat was sinking and decided to turn the engines and go full speed to the island where he ditched the boat (with one engine already out) into the coast guard's concrete ramp. Fortuantely nobody was injured and all is well that ends well.
The coast guard tried in vain to figure out why the boat started to have water get into it. The boat had 3 bilge pumps but apparently they were overwhelmed when water flooded the batteries. There were 4 holes (2 at each side) which had rubber flaps and seem to be some sort of drain. When we were pulling water from inside the boat I could feel negative suction there from outside the boat ... so I plugged those with cloth and that seemed to alleviate the problem when we pulled water out ... but water always managed to get back in in large amounts. Couldn't really figure out where. When the tide went the boat totally drained all the water but when the tide came back in ... again it filled inside with water. The coast guard had no idea what the problem was. At first they thought the main drain plug had somehow fallen out ... but that was firmly in.
I wonder if any of you guys have experience with this boat. Personally I think that the engines are way too heavy for that boat and somehow they unbalanced the automatic drains. Those drains with the rubber non return valvle just seem like a horrendous design flaw. Rubber will generally become less pliable with time and it seems like this little thing actually managed to sink the boat. That is my theory ofcourse ... but the coast guard checked the hull and could not see any visible damage and we did not hit anything ... it was actually a very smooth ride to the island. If anyone has any ideas I would be very grateful. Today the coast guard will send a big ship with a crane and they will pull the boat out. It hurt to see those brand new engines totally under water and I wonder if any permanent damage was done to them. Today I found myself looking at high capacity bilge pumps. I definetely want to add a redundant system for my boat (have a 36 foot boat) and make sure an extra battery is setup high above the water line just in case.
Thanks in advance for any information you might have.
The coast guard tried in vain to figure out why the boat started to have water get into it. The boat had 3 bilge pumps but apparently they were overwhelmed when water flooded the batteries. There were 4 holes (2 at each side) which had rubber flaps and seem to be some sort of drain. When we were pulling water from inside the boat I could feel negative suction there from outside the boat ... so I plugged those with cloth and that seemed to alleviate the problem when we pulled water out ... but water always managed to get back in in large amounts. Couldn't really figure out where. When the tide went the boat totally drained all the water but when the tide came back in ... again it filled inside with water. The coast guard had no idea what the problem was. At first they thought the main drain plug had somehow fallen out ... but that was firmly in.
I wonder if any of you guys have experience with this boat. Personally I think that the engines are way too heavy for that boat and somehow they unbalanced the automatic drains. Those drains with the rubber non return valvle just seem like a horrendous design flaw. Rubber will generally become less pliable with time and it seems like this little thing actually managed to sink the boat. That is my theory ofcourse ... but the coast guard checked the hull and could not see any visible damage and we did not hit anything ... it was actually a very smooth ride to the island. If anyone has any ideas I would be very grateful. Today the coast guard will send a big ship with a crane and they will pull the boat out. It hurt to see those brand new engines totally under water and I wonder if any permanent damage was done to them. Today I found myself looking at high capacity bilge pumps. I definetely want to add a redundant system for my boat (have a 36 foot boat) and make sure an extra battery is setup high above the water line just in case.
Thanks in advance for any information you might have.