Guys please keep our Bertram Brother Harry Babb in your thoughts and prayers, he should know
That we all have his back. I for one could not ask for a better friend. I share your pain and would do ANYTHING
To help you through this.
The record rainfall of this week took its toll.
BH
Last edited by Bob H. on May 1st, '14, 18:37, edited 1 time in total.
1966 31 Bahia Mar #316-512....8 years later..Resolute is now a reality..Builder to Boater..285 hours on the clocks..enjoying every minute..how many days till spring?
Tuesday evening I took my parents out to celebrate their anniversary. About 6:30 it started raining.....and wow...did it rain! ! ! On my way home from dinner I went by the "River" to check on DeNada, she was floating just fine and based on history there was no reason for major concern.......that turned out to be a very bad decision.
People that live on Fish River tell me that at 12:30 AM Wednesday the river was high but still well within her banks.
I woke up at 2:30 to a very intense period of rain accompanied with thunder and lightening. At 4 AM I made the 15 minute drive to the "River"....thinking that I may need to move her out of the boat house and put her on anchor if the water was getting to high. By that time it was all over. Most roads to the river were impassable and water had risen to a record high......even higher that recorded durning hurricane Danny in 1997.
Wednesday at lunch time I went to the river where a young man gave me a boat ride down "Honey Road" to our lot. The water was 7 feet deep in the yard and there was no sight whatsoever of DeNada. Wednesday afternoon late we launched an aluminum boat and rode up to our boat house. Still no sight of DeNada. We drove in the boat house and I leaned over the side and with my arm in the water armpit deep I could feel the canvas top. Until then I was hoping that the ole girl possibly broke away from her berth and was floating down the river......but that was not the case.
This afternoon, my friends and I successfully raised DeNada .
Tomorrow we will move on to drying out the engines and removing the Genset and getting back to where we were on Tuesday afternoon.
Harry, so sorry you have to deal with this, but thankful everyone is OK. Looks like the water pressure blew your bow hatch off. As bad as the photos of Denada are, seeing the group of friends lending a hand is equally positive. As Bob and the others have said, your friends here on the Board stand ready to help.
like everyone...... sorry to see this. everyone who ever owned a boat always has this in the back of their mind. sucks when it becomes a reality. at least its fresh water.
Harry here in NY cleaning engines would be a whore . Epa would lock me up so i would have to remove engines where youare we can flush the engines. With diesel fuel and transmission fluid.till clean amd roll her over with injectors out.as soon as possible drain the fluid from gears i wish i was there to help you.!!!
Last edited by bob lico on May 2nd, '14, 11:52, edited 1 time in total.
Sorry Harry. Can't say how many times over the years I've been called to do just what your doing. Still never made it easy. But it can be done.
First is flushing the engines and get them running and heated to normal operating temp to burn off any trapped moisture asap and fresh oil circulated inside the block. Don't just pickle them and let sit till another day.
Change gear oil and while engine is running, cycle gear. Get that fresh oil circulating. The bright side is they weren't running so you don't have a oil/water goo mix that is a killer on crank and cam journals.
Oh God Harry!! I had no idea it was that bad!! We lucked out on this storm and went between the two waves of the storm. Both east and west of us got it bad!! Let me know if there is anything we can do!
Bruce what do you do in florida with fuel in tank? We pump it ourselves but pay 1.78 per gallon to dispose (and you need tranfer tickets to show EPA.) then the bastards just mix with # 6 bunker and they sell it to schools and factories to burn.
Harry, I guess the good news is you know that boat inside and out. I hope you are adequately insured and can have someone help out with the heavy lifting. That must be brutal, but I know that you can withstand this negative event with your positive attitude. Sorry to see those pictures.
Bruce that is covenience answer to the problem now lets apply this to harry. he can put weight like a few guys in back of boat open rear of tank were pick up is put hose down to bottom with regular car electric fuel pump he can pumpdown until water stops coming out and diesel just starts coming out take a couple of gallons out and he is good at that point then connects pump to engine side of raccors and take out another 10 gallons and ruby red fuel is flowing ,change raccors and remove cummins engine filter and replace .in theory no water should have seep into fuel injection pump because he did not roll then over yet.
This afternoon I removed all of the injectors, the aftercoolers and the turbo inlet casting.......pumped out the engine oil and started charging the house batteries.
Tomorrow I will check the gears for water, change the gear oil and contiune to clean and prepare to run both engines (without the aftercoolers and on Jerry Jugs) and bring them up to operating temperature.......then change the oil again and run them some more.
My express prayers are with you. At least you know what to do and how to do it. Better than the turn-the-key-and-go, clueless crowd. If I were closer I'd grab my bucket and mop and ride.
We're all thinking about you and saying little prayers.
Better days ahead!
Mikey
3/18/1963 - -31-327 factory hardtop express, the only one left.
The difference between genius and stupidity is that genius has its limits.
-Albert Einstein
Both engines are running.......without "Aftercoolers" but running none the less.
Found an 8" long Ell living in the bildge......was scooping up MUD! ! ! and scooped him up in my hand.......at that moment I was ready to give away the farm.....
Tomorrow I change the oil again and start cleaning the fuel tank and remove the Genset........
Nice work Harry, I can see your smile from here,glad to hear them both running. save that eel
Great live bait!!
Blue water ships store in Foley, Alabama will have a frequent and familiar face...
Miss Joanne will understand..;) BH
1966 31 Bahia Mar #316-512....8 years later..Resolute is now a reality..Builder to Boater..285 hours on the clocks..enjoying every minute..how many days till spring?
Good deal Harry. You got to them and flushed them quickly, they should be fine. I bought my Ford 3000 diesel tractor sitting in a field with the engine full of rain water, 2 weeks later it was running like a champ, and still does. De Nada will survive!
Scot
1969 Bertram 25 "Roly Poly"
she'll float one of these days.. no really it will :-0
Harry,
Sorry to hear about the boat. If you need anything give me a call I can't do much with only one working leg, but the moral support is there. Make sure you call your insurance company as soon as possible, if you have insurance. And get a surveyor that knows what a 31' Bertram is and what it costs to repair. The positive thing is that she was in fresh water and your engines are okay.
Pete Fallon
Been off line for a while, so missed the post from Bob......awful,to see da nada in those pix. Makes me sick. Don' t have much to add over whats been said.....Best of luck on the rehab. You're in our thoughts and prayers.
Harry!
I just saw this post and am so saddened for you. Not a moment's hesitation you can set it right but sorry for the time and energy to do so.
Keeping a good thought for you.
Stephan
Bob wrote:Harry do you know how to remove package from aftercooler?i am just am away.
Bob......the Aftercoolers are in my shop.....end caps removed.....and the bundle is on the table....tomorrow I will clean them and reassemble pressure test and then its back on boat.....
Pumped the fuel tank today.......we hoisted the bow of the boat really high and tilted her to the Port then pumped off about 20 gallons of Watery fuel.....then good clean "Red Diesel" started flowing. Hooked up the fuel lines and started both engines......ran them until they were good and hot......changed the oil and filters.......Tuesday reinstall the Aftercoolers run them up to tempt again and change the oil for the final time..........lots of work and not nearly as much fun this time as it was the first time......but by the end of the week I will most likely have the engines squared away........still have to deal with the starters and alternators.....
Harry, you are awesome...go get it done. I really love the "no quit" attitude, it would be so easy to be pissed off and bitter, but really, you are just fixing things and I love that...Go get 'em Mr. Babb
Ok harry some people have trouble disassembling aftercooler ------- not harry he is a master! Harry i should think you will have no proplem with starter, altenator immense in fresh water .
Harry,
A couple of suggestions before you start putting her back together again. See if you can find someone in your area that can make you some fiberglass panels. When I was building boats back in the early 2000's I had the guy's lay up 6 sheets of 4'x8x' 3/8" core matt with one side gel coated white and one sheet of 4'x10'x3/8" core matt. We had a couple of 4'x8' glass topped tables and a 5'x10' table, you can also use a Formica topped table. We had a chopper gun also so it went real quick. Can't remember how much they were per panel but it wasn't that bad.
I used them in the cockpit sides(you can get both side panels out of one sheet 24" x8'), the transom piece was the 10' x 24" piece. The rest I used in the cabin headliner's, 2 in main cabin and 2 in V berth, and left over pieces for the head compartment overhead. Also used them for under the cabin side at dinette table area. The left over scrap was used inside the hanging lockers and under the galley locker. You will not have to deal with fabric headliner, you can pressure wash everything inside the cabin, with the exception of the V berth hull side liner. I don't worry about ripping the overhead with gaffs, fishing rods or anything else that needs to go inside the cabin. Easy clean up and your existing teak trim can be re-used to cover the edges in the cabin, you will have to make some new pieces in the V berth overhead, but you can get away with out any trim in the V berth area if you make tight cuts with your pattern. I know you've got a lot of work ahead of you but the core matt panels are the best way to go, no plywood to rot or get moldy, easy to work with using a cut off wheel and looks great when finished.
Pete Fallon