Casey":3ekbxavm said:
Finally found the water!
I drilled the hole for an access port just inside the cabin door, and went deeper ... and there was the water. Somehow I feel vindicated.
After the 6.5" hole was cut-in I pumped thirteen quarts of water from the void beneath the deck. (An aquarium pump worked very well to get rid of most of the water.) Changing the angle of the boat (on the trailer) didn't seem to make any difference in the amount of water in the void.
The airspace is drying now, and in a couple days I'll install the Beckson plate and begin cutting the hole for the aft inspection port.
Casey
Casey, congratulations! Of course you still have to figure out how that much water got there in the first place, right? Seems like an awful lot for condensation.
You've drilled small holes between the fuel tanks and didn't find any water. Was that true even if you tipped the bow up significantly? If so, I'm really puzzled. In my boat, I can't think of a way there is water under the cabin floor, and not under the cockpit floor. I don't think the Alaskan bulkhead connection with the hull is water tight, and my theory has evolved into thinking the water gets in somewhere in the cockpit (I have eliminated the anchor locker and the water tank as sources), and migrates under the cabin doorway into the cabin.
I think with the boat at rest, water inside the hull will settle somewhere near midship. I understood that one of the reasons for the raised and rearward sloping cockpit sole is to force water to the stern sump, thus eliminating (
theoretically!) the need for a bilge pump near the cabin door.
I have to think the water is getting in through improperly sealed fuel tank mounting screws, or cracks in sole-to-hull seams at or near the transom. Have you checked any of these things?
I've resigned myself to an inspection plate just aft of the cabin door, and maybe one just inside the cabin, depending on what the bulkhead-to-hull connection looks like under the door. I'm thinking I may not even bother with one all the way back, although maybe that would facilitate ventilation.
I would love to abandon my current thinking on this altogether. I'd be happy as a clam if the problem really is condensation, there are no leaks in the cockpit, and all I need is a small access hole for the occasional use of an aquarium pump!
Glad to hear your project is coming along so well. I'm still looking for time and courage enough to start mine.