Spotter
Veteran Member
I live in Alaska and this weekend I went to my boat which is on the hard. (The boat is a 1978 37’ pacific trawler.) I hooked a portable generator to the ship to shore cord and I left everything off at the panel except the power to my hurricane heater. Turned the burner on and went to work on the boat.
When it came to temp of the t-stat setting, I needed something out of my truck and when I exited the boat I noticed that a one inch thru hull on the stern was dripping glycol out of it. A bucket and absorbent pads were placed there and it was coming out about the diameter of a pencil. When I turned off the burner it stopped. I crawled into the lazzarette and there was a heater hose from the thru hull to the bulkhead. When I entered the engine room in the rear I lost it due to it being behind the water tank. The heater has a glycol receptacle that was full. a small overflow jug had about one inch of glycol in it. The system also is hooked to a tank that resembled a twenty pound propane tank with a bleeder valve on the top of it. I opened it and couldn’t hear any air and no glycol escaped from it.
Every time I turned on the burner, the flow would come out again and I captured about a gallon of glycol. I didn’t see any heater hose running from the lazzarette to the system and I am completely out of ideas and was hoping somebody might be able to give a pointer or two. Thanks!
When it came to temp of the t-stat setting, I needed something out of my truck and when I exited the boat I noticed that a one inch thru hull on the stern was dripping glycol out of it. A bucket and absorbent pads were placed there and it was coming out about the diameter of a pencil. When I turned off the burner it stopped. I crawled into the lazzarette and there was a heater hose from the thru hull to the bulkhead. When I entered the engine room in the rear I lost it due to it being behind the water tank. The heater has a glycol receptacle that was full. a small overflow jug had about one inch of glycol in it. The system also is hooked to a tank that resembled a twenty pound propane tank with a bleeder valve on the top of it. I opened it and couldn’t hear any air and no glycol escaped from it.
Every time I turned on the burner, the flow would come out again and I captured about a gallon of glycol. I didn’t see any heater hose running from the lazzarette to the system and I am completely out of ideas and was hoping somebody might be able to give a pointer or two. Thanks!