Hey markpierce, it and a few fans will be running fairly continuous for the first week or so after we actually close the deal on the boat. It has been sitting for over two years and the carbs are seeping fuel causing the whole boat to reek of gasoline.
The current blower is making noise and is in a fairly tight spot so it needs to be fairly compact.
For right now, we're actually going to rent it out as an Airbnb when we aren't using it so I need to get all of the fumes vented thoroughly and the smell out of the bilge and cabin.
After I rebuild the carbs and get the seepage cleaned up it should be fine but I've been reading reviews about how a lot of these new blowers are pushing 80-85 db.
That sounds truly terrifying, I can't imagine a marina or insurance company comfortable with a boat with gasoline fumes and oblivious guests paying to stay aboard without oversight. I understand there are economic factors but I would pause on everything until you are certain the gas leaks are secured. Are you certain the tanks are sound and not contributing to this problem.
On a gas powered boat that has gas fumes in it, my absolute first thing would be to stop the gas leaks immediately, not tomorrow but today. There is no way to confidently predict what might ignite the fumes. Just putting in a blower to evacuate the fumes isn’t a safe way to proceed, fix the leaks right now.
Any blower used on a gas boat needs to be ignition protected, so many of the options people use to extract heat from an engine room with diesels aren't usable here.
I didn’t understand that it wasn’t your boat yet. Then yours is a reasonable plan. Good luck. We are also in the process of buying a boat, we are on boat offer #3 now.
Best of luck, it can be frustrating.
No sea trial? I don't understand the rationale.Luckily we don't have to do actual sea trials because ours is on a landlocked lake in N. Central Texas. It hasn't been driven in a couple of years but is in pretty decent shape from being in a covered slip the whole time.
Hoping to find sound info on secondary use 4" round blowers. Want to quiet the exhausters in the galley and heads. Don't mind hearing the ER blowers - it reminds me they are on but the others are annoyingly loud.
Long ago I ran some gas boats. The bilge blowers only need to be run for several minutes before starting an engine. They don't need to run continuously. It's important that any vent tubing to the blower extend to the lower bilge. That's where gasoline fumes will gather. Two blowers are better than one. Anytime you start the engines, the blowers need to run. Even if you just shutdown for a few minutes. The carbs should have spark arresters.
When fueling a gas boat, everything needs to be off. Nothing with a flame or with contacts that could spark.
About 60 years ago I saw a 65' gas boat blowup and it still scares me. Investigation showed the bilge blower switches were off and assumed not used. Boat was wood, ex-military aviation rescue, and was mostly splinters. Owner wasn't killed by the explosion or the fall from considerable altitude. But the sudden stop on the next dock did him in.
You're gonna burn a lot of gas in that boat.
Sigh,
I keep hanging on hoping someone will respond to th OP's original question with a review of the sound levels of currently available bilge blowers.