Tink
Veteran Member
- Joined
- Jul 10, 2017
- Messages
- 68
- Location
- USA
- Vessel Name
- Tinker Belle
- Vessel Make
- 1973 Gulfstar 43 Trawler
In January of this year I purchased a 1973 Gulfstar 43 from a fellow Trawler Forum member (Thanks Victor!) in Galveston, TX. I live in Tennessee so I had some work to do to get her ready for the trip. I set about replacing every hose clamp (about $250 worth) and anything that contained rubber or a rubber seal on the boat. I added 2 Garmin chart plotters, radar and vesper AIS. Also repaired the windlass. All of this took a lot of time to study out and the logistics of commuting to Texas did not help my time line. Thanks to the knowledge on this forum, the work was fairly painless. I'm not new to boating but every new boat (new to me) has a learning curve.
During my first visit to the boat, I noticed both engines (Perkins 6.354 Turbo) were hard starting when they were cold. Once they started they ran great. I thought that maybe I would need to get the high pressure fuel pumps rebuilt at some point. As I was getting the boat ready for its journey back to Tennessee, I noticed that the port engine high pressure pump was leaking diesel into the bilge. Had the pump sent to a rebuilder in Houston (M&D Diesel) for diagnosis and eventual repair. Pump was in rough shape and needed rebuilt. Nothing appeared out of sorts with the starboard pump but considering I was getting ready to travel 1,500 miles in the boat, I sent the starboard pump to M&D Diesel for examination. That was a good decision since the starboard pump was in worse shape than the port pump. Getting the pumps rebuilt was about an 8 week process, but definitely worth the wait.
I'll be posting excerpts from my log of the trip in the next few days. I'm now in Mobile with limited bandwith so I'll need find a better connection in order to post pictures. Stay tuned....
During my first visit to the boat, I noticed both engines (Perkins 6.354 Turbo) were hard starting when they were cold. Once they started they ran great. I thought that maybe I would need to get the high pressure fuel pumps rebuilt at some point. As I was getting the boat ready for its journey back to Tennessee, I noticed that the port engine high pressure pump was leaking diesel into the bilge. Had the pump sent to a rebuilder in Houston (M&D Diesel) for diagnosis and eventual repair. Pump was in rough shape and needed rebuilt. Nothing appeared out of sorts with the starboard pump but considering I was getting ready to travel 1,500 miles in the boat, I sent the starboard pump to M&D Diesel for examination. That was a good decision since the starboard pump was in worse shape than the port pump. Getting the pumps rebuilt was about an 8 week process, but definitely worth the wait.
I'll be posting excerpts from my log of the trip in the next few days. I'm now in Mobile with limited bandwith so I'll need find a better connection in order to post pictures. Stay tuned....