I mounted a through-hull transducer in my M15 on the
inside of the hull just forward of the keel/centerboard. I used clear
silicone instead of the epoxy supplied with the transducer, just in case I
needed to move the unit to a different position later. Use a big
glob of silicone and make sure there are no bubbles it. Gently weight the
transducer until the silicone sets. My Eagle Magna depth sounder/fish
finder works great with this installation... and I didn't have to drill
another hole in the boat.
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Friday, April 26, 2002 8:48
PM
Subject: Re: M_Boats: transducer
position
Doug, do I read your message right that you mount
your depth transducer on a bed of caulking to the hull?
I thought they had to be immersed in water or
some other liquid, sealed inside a short section of pvc
pipe,or other such container.
Do they work simply sealed to the inside of
the boat ?
Wayne M17 #204 Intrepid
>----- Original Message -----
Sent: Wednesday, April 24, 2002 9:41
PM
Subject: Re: M_Boats: transducer
position
Howard,
I've addressed each question
below it. Let me preface by saying as a first-time real-boat servant (I
would debate what owns who) and a never-time-working knotmeter owner, I've
decided to start this boaty-sitting odyssey by erring on the side of
caution. Or to put it succinctly, "written directions are the first refuge
of the ignorant".
Then at some belated point I reach analysis paralysis,
throw up my hands, and like-y Nike, "just do it".
At 06:11 PM 4/24/02
-0500, you wrote:
Doug:
Which part goes bad on the
road trips. The transducer or the knotmeter?
As I
recall from August 2000 when the unit went in for service, the meter went
bad. I don't have the receipt, but just tonight I looked at the parts and
the meter guts housing looks new and the impeller (paddlewheel transducer)
looks used. I recall the technician saying that a competent person can stick
multi-meter probes into the correct connector leads from the transducer,
spin it and determine which unit is bad based on amount of electrical
output. So I just sent it in. You may be able to call the manufacturer's
service department and get the particulars, it's not my area. Might be a
first step, though.
Are we talking removal of the transducer
for road trips or disconnecting?
I'm just going by
what the manual says from here on out (my model is Standard Horizon
SL45):
"To protect the paddlewheel insert, use the long blanking plug
when the boat will be moored in salt water for more than a week, the boat
will be removed from the water, or aquatic growth build-up on the
paddlewheel is suspected due to inaccurate readings from the
instrument."
Under "Servicing the Paddlewheel Insert":
The water
lubricated paddlewheel bearings have a life of 5 years on low speed boats
(less than 10 kn) and 1 year on high speed vessels".
I take that to
mean that more spinning, especially out of water, means more wear. The big
question I have is, does the paddlewheel spin while running down the road?
As easily as it spins when I just blow on it, I think it must (I know I'm a
blowhard, but not THAT hard).
When I asked the boatyard guy, he said
to take it out when trailering.
The model I have is simple to remove and
replace the paddlewheel plug with the blanking plug, which will protect both
the paddlewheel and the meter unit. Takes about 5 seconds, since I replaced
one of the retaining rings to the locking pin with a hitch pin. Pull the
hitch pin, pull the retaining pin, slide the impeller unit out of the
thru-hull sleeve, and reverse the process with the blanking plug.
Considering how easy it is to do, why take the chance?
My knotmeter went dead and the new one I
installed to replace it was just as dead, but I didn t replace the old
transducer....yet. That doesn t look like something you would want
to do everyday.
I don't think it's that difficult on
my unit. I can order just a paddlewheel kit. On mine, the thru-hull is a
separate sleeve that is permanently installed. The transducer unit slides in
and out of it, sealed with a few lubricated O-rings and locked into place
with the retaining pin. The thru-hull sleeve doesn't have to be removed.
I use a GPS to determine speed, but that
gets corrupted by current. It would be nice to know both the actual speed
through the water and speed over ground.