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 Post subject: Leak Check
PostPosted: Fri May 22, 2009 5:21 pm 
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Joined: Tue May 27, 2003 12:44 pm
Posts: 15076
Location: Oceanside, California
The hulls are designed to vent with changes in temperature and altitude pressure.

Hulls need to "breathe". Without the vent, the hulls will flex when pressure changes inside as compared to outside the hull. This can cause distortion to the structure of the hull. If you hear a puff of air when removing a drain plug, that is not "a good thing".

If your hull leaks beyond a small amount, you can find out where and repair it fairly easily.

Force air pressure inside the hull in some way. There are many possible ways to do that. By mouth, hair drier, vacuum exhaust, tire pump... whatever. DO NOT put more than a couple pounds of pressure into the hull. I prefer the vacuum exhaust. Direct the flow into the drain hole, but do not seal it tightly. Any positive pressure inside the hull will try to escape. It will escape through possible leak locations.

Mop, sponge or spray soapy water around fittings and seams that are suspect. Bubbles will be formed by the air escaping from the hull.

Look at the keels. Are they wearing through? Look at the drain plug gasket. Is there one? Is it crushed and out of place when the plug is installed? Look at the hull fittings. Look at the rod holders. Look at the mast mount hole. Freezing water in the mast and rod tubes could crack the tubes and cause leaks.

How-to from Roadrunner! Thanks!

Equipment:
--vacuum with hose
--soapy water with brush
--cardboard cut-out
--tape

Procedure:
1. Cut a cardboard large enough to cover one of your hatches with a hole to accommodate your vacuum hose. Precision is not critical.

2. Open a convenient hatch and tape your cardboard over the opening. No need for it to be air tight -- this requires very little pressurization.

3. Insert one end of your hose into the outlet side of the vacuum to provide a source of air and the other through the cardboard. Tape over any large gaps. Don't worry about blowing your hull up.

4. With your vacuum exhaust blowing air into the hull, liberally paint soapy water over any suspected leak area.

Areas that will normally leak are rudder lines, rudder handles, large hatch and non-gasketed hatches (ex: 5" screw-in hatch)

Areas that should not leak but are easy to correct (or live with) are gasketed hatches (ex: Twist and Stow) and their mounting surfaces.

Stressed areas to check as a precaution:
-- front nose of drivewell
-- cam lock areas on either side of drivewell
-- scupper cart holes
-- seat peg recesses
-- rudder mount area
-- any place that looks seriously cut, scraped, or abraded

Any leak should be easy to spot!

It's pretty hard for leaks to hide using this technique. The idea of filling your hull with water, by comparison, is slow, inefficient, poor at pinpointing leaks near the top surface and potentially stressful to the hull.

Hobie has made several improvements to minimize water entry in '07 and '08 with redesigned cable routing, cable entry points, cable tube seals and rudder controls. Still, my wife no longer stores her paperback books in the hold without some sort of bag (especially in active water).

With your left over soapy water you can finish cleaning your boat! 8)

_________________
Matt Miller
Former - Director of Parts and Accessory Sales
Warranty and Technical Support
Hobie Cat USA
(Retired 11/7/2022)


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