NewBoater
Jetboaters Captain
- Messages
- 1,010
- Reaction score
- 617
- Points
- 242
- Location
- Virginia Beach
- Boat Make
- Yamaha
- Year
- 2018
- Boat Model
- 242X E-Series
- Boat Length
- 24
As title states it will be going a few months with no use for rest of winter. I have a premium mooring cover on it but I know some water will still get in. Don’t want rain water to build in engine compartment.
Is there only one drain plug in engine compartment? Open that up and open main drain plug on back of boat? I’m assuming if it gets in engine area it would go out that drain plug and then out the main drain?
				
			Is there only one drain plug in engine compartment? Open that up and open main drain plug on back of boat? I’m assuming if it gets in engine area it would go out that drain plug and then out the main drain?
 
	 
 
		 BTW thought this would be the appropriate place to mention the following.....pretty sure we all know this but as the best glass guy for 300 miles around here told me years ago "Boat builders generally do a pretty good job with gel coat on their hulls now and with the new vinylester resins the hulls can withstand being wet slipped with no fear of osmosis starting from the outside HOWEVER only the very best boat builders seal the areas of their inside hulls where water might go - SO - you have a hull sealed on the outside and if water gets in from the inside it can not escape so you have the potential of dreaded osmosis hull destruction - make sure your inside hull has as little water in it as possible for as short a time as possible or you will be giving me a nice down-payment on something!" IMO great advice!
 BTW thought this would be the appropriate place to mention the following.....pretty sure we all know this but as the best glass guy for 300 miles around here told me years ago "Boat builders generally do a pretty good job with gel coat on their hulls now and with the new vinylester resins the hulls can withstand being wet slipped with no fear of osmosis starting from the outside HOWEVER only the very best boat builders seal the areas of their inside hulls where water might go - SO - you have a hull sealed on the outside and if water gets in from the inside it can not escape so you have the potential of dreaded osmosis hull destruction - make sure your inside hull has as little water in it as possible for as short a time as possible or you will be giving me a nice down-payment on something!" IMO great advice!  
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 I have had a boat lift fail and found my boat half in the water
I have had a boat lift fail and found my boat half in the water 
			 
 
		 
			
 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		
 
 
		 
 
		 
 
		