Playing with propane again. My manifold was all bolted down so it cannot move. Last year when we closed out the season it was all fine. When we got aboard a few days ago, Karen said she smelled propane. Leaping into action, I chased the smell to the propane locker. After much fiddling, I discovered it was both the manifold and the regulator. The manifold fittings were all loose and if I held the flashlight at just the right angle, I could see the density waves of propane flowing out of the regulator vent. How can this happen? Regardless, it is now all fixed and my locker is clean (soapy water at close to 50/50 mix is a pretty good, if not goopy cleaner). All tightened, fittings are taped with yellow teflon tape + blue PFTE compound, tightened hand-tight + 1 turn with a wrench. So far, we haven't smelled more propane nor have we blown up. My next project is to replace this domest...
And what we did or didn't do about it... Kabola furnace ship hot water loop, inop. · We never did find the fix for this. Costica (Kabola genius) was aboard to help diagnose while we were still in Anacortes. Windlass · Turned out to be the breaker (Doh!). Just closed the breaker and voi-la! It worked. Thrusters (bow & stern). When we moved to Lithium batteries and installed new chargers, we forgot to account for the AGMs on the thrusters, so they had no chargers. · Installed AC-DC chargers (bow and stern) that run off the inverter. Not ideal, but it was expeditious. Woody came to Campbell River and brought two chargers and installed them – Thanks, Woody. Propane system for the gas cooktop. We had an intermittent very low flame to no flame if multiple burners were on....
Ahhhhh
ReplyDeleteExactly!
ReplyDeleteJust like being there! Ha!
ReplyDelete