Umm Five where is your blower vent going to hook up now? Or did you just decide to screw the blower venting?
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Taking on water through rear vents?
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Originally posted by WABoating View PostI continue to check for this, varying my slowdown speeds etc. while surfing. I presume I could force it to happen, but so far it hasn't. I wonder if our swim deck has something to do with it... I've noticed that the 24Ve swim deck is quite a bit larger than some others, such as the RZ's.
Besides, your blower vent is probably still attached to the hole as well.Waiting for another good one!
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Originally posted by lohe View PostUmm Five where is your blower vent going to hook up now? Or did you just decide to screw the blower venting?Waiting for another good one!
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Tigé Jedi
- Jul 2010
- 4302
- TN USA
- Ballast Sensors, Hose Sensors, IMU's, Tige SpeedSet panels and more shipping every day!
Originally posted by Fiveflat View PostYour vent system is entirely different than mine and you likely don't have as much ballast as I run when I really do bring water in that hole.
Ballast: We have two configurations: 1300-1400 pounds of water per side when I have additional human ballast, or I can open up the secondary sac section to add ~300-400 per side when I don't have human ballast. So most of the time I'm running ~1500-1700 pounds of ballast on the side we're surfing at the moment (all entirely hidden and automated).
How much ballast are you running? Are you running both sides for wakeboarding, or just one side for wakesurfing? We haven't maxed out our sacs for boarding yet... if you're doing that then it could really make a difference.
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I have a boat 12 years older, 3 feet shorter and 2 inches narrower, not to mention a freeboard much lower as well. My rear vent is below the rub rail and when I weight my boat for surf I only have approximately 1200-1600lbs in the port aft corner and my rubrail is below the water by about 1/4".
The newer boats like yours are very hard to get wet like these old 21V's.Waiting for another good one!
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Originally posted by Fiveflat View PostI have a boat 12 years older, 3 feet shorter and 2 inches narrower, not to mention a freeboard much lower as well. My rear vent is below the rub rail and when I weight my boat for surf I only have approximately 1200-1600lbs in the port aft corner and my rubrail is below the water by about 1/4".
The newer boats like yours are very hard to get wet like these old 21V's.
And my 21v freeboard is sooooo much more then my 21i I always felt like I was going to sink that thing lol.
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Tigé Jedi
- Jul 2010
- 4302
- TN USA
- Ballast Sensors, Hose Sensors, IMU's, Tige SpeedSet panels and more shipping every day!
Originally posted by Fiveflat View PostI have a boat 12 years older, 3 feet shorter and 2 inches narrower, not to mention a freeboard much lower as well. My rear vent is below the rub rail and when I weight my boat for surf I only have approximately 1200-1600lbs in the port aft corner and my rubrail is below the water by about 1/4".
I'll keep watching the thread to see how things work out. It's always interesting to watch the experimentation process and see how the final answer develops.
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I have a '99 21V and water coming in through the vent hole has always been a problem. I have not covered it yet, but keep thinking about it. Seems like I don't need the blower anyway on my boat. I think the engine gets plenty of air, sometimes I forget to turn it on when I start the boat and it doesn't matter if the blowers running or not. This seems like a manufacturing error to me and Tige should have a retro-fit kit to fix it.
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Originally posted by bgkchild View Post... Seems like I don't need the blower anyway on my boat. I think the engine gets plenty of air, sometimes I forget to turn it on when I start the boat and it doesn't matter if the blowers running or not. This seems like a manufacturing error to me and Tige should have a retro-fit kit to fix it.
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Out of habit I always lift the engine cover and take a whiff of the engine bay. It sits open for about 5 minutes while we are prepping the boat to launch.
I admit, I would like to run the blower, but mine had never been hooked up properly since I bought it and honestly Dingle - you should see the gaps between the covers on these 'ol 21V's... plenty of space for gasses to escape.Waiting for another good one!
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Originally posted by Fiveflat View PostOut of habit I always lift the engine cover and take a whiff of the engine bay. It sits open for about 5 minutes while we are prepping the boat to launch.
I admit, I would like to run the blower, but mine had never been hooked up properly since I bought it and honestly Dingle - you should see the gaps between the covers on these 'ol 21V's... plenty of space for gasses to escape.
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Tigé Jedi
- Jul 2010
- 4302
- TN USA
- Ballast Sensors, Hose Sensors, IMU's, Tige SpeedSet panels and more shipping every day!
Originally posted by dingleberry View PostUnfortunately, just opening the hatch will not dissipate the vapors (although it is a good idea to give a sniff for any fumes). Gasoline vapors are heavier than air, so they will collect in the bottom of the hull. Open the hatch, and they will continue to sit in the bottom of the hull. And, at the correct concentration, they will present an explosive environment waiting for a spark.
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