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Bee

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Everything posted by Bee

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  3. I think there were stern wheelers on the Rhine until quite recently (?). the wheel was not like the Mississippi image of the wheel but buried ender the stern. Quite how the rudder arrangement worked I've no idea, must have been a bit unresponsive I'd have thought.
  4. Hooray! Now these freeloaders will have to pay their way. Oh, Hang on, now I can't afford a licence either. (Just a comment, my boat is not in the UK)
  5. Personally I would do pretty much as Tony suggests, Buy a brass 'Tank connecter' from Screwfix, clean up the surfaces so they are clean and flat, fix a bit of in 15mm copper with a hose tail on it, fix and forget, I wouldn't worry about trying to get a tube right down to the tank bottom, the last couple of inches are neither here nor there as far as capacity is concerned. As for capping off the disused pipe it depends on what is on the end of it, if it is threaded then a trip to a plumbers merchant should provide you with a cap of some sort.
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  7. Donkeys years ago near Manchester some youths flung stones at me and the boat as i approached a bridge, i was drinking a beer from a heavy pint glass and instinct took over - hurled the glass at them, luckily missed and the glass sailed off to somewhere unknown. I still flinch at the thought of where the glass went and hopefully it missed anything important. I had a shorter temper in those days...
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  9. It is always said that you cannot put epoxy over bitumen. I think that for the actual, real, answer you need to get in touch with the technical dept. of, for instance, Jotun. I think that it is a bad idea but on Bee with bitumen down to the waterline then epoxy below it seems that the epoxy has stuck to the bitumen but the bitumen has not stuck at all to the epoxy (which is red so that is how I can tell) Maybe paint technology has come on a bit- who knows
  10. I have one. The shaft on Bee is about 12 foot between the gland and the gearbox, the engine is a Beta 43 and it wobbles - as it should - the shaft has a Python drive and hefty thrust bearing near the stern gland and three or four pillow blocks supporting the 1.5 " shaft then a Fenaflex up against the gearbox. The Fenaflex will not take thrust, the tyre squashes or pulls apart depending on whether ahead or astern but its Ok for a wobbly engine so it doesn't wreck the output shaft bearing, the real thrust is taken by the Python drive thrust bearing and there is another pillow block between that and the conventional stuffing box. Not all of that is needed on a boat with a short shaft but Bee has been many miles over about 18 years and the stern gland and packing is still original and perfectly fine. There is no stress on the gearbox and no strain on the stern gland. It sounds expensive and complicated but it was all second hand and done to make expensive stuff last. It is a bit heavy though and the inertia when going into gear makes the PRM box clunk as it engages - nothing is perfect but Fenner flex couplings are v. good things.
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  12. These engines share a lot of parts when you don't expect it and then when you expect them to share parts they don't - the good old days of Brit. engineering!
  13. Absolutely wonderful pictures. Thanks
  14. I wonder if its possible to fit a couple of shock absorbers to it? I'm thinking maybe from a scrap washing machine or something? Might be possible to take one each side from a handy nut on the engine to a bracket on the side of the boat, Of course there will not be any handy brackets or bolts 'cos that's the way it goes but it might just work.
  15. ASAP stock all sorts of hose but when I did the plumbing on BEE I used this Plumbing Hose 13mm (Per Metre) (asap-supplies.com) for everything and its been perfectly OK for years, You must use proper hose tails but its been fine for hot and cold water and it is much easier for those really awkward places that you really don't want to try in copper or anything non bendy. Obviously not for central heating but worked great on BEE
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  20. There has been a couple of us with Beta lift pump problems recently, engine cutting out etc and other problems so I had a look at the Beta manual and this is what it says...... ' The fuel pump will only lift fuel through 0.25 metres, if this is insufficient then an electric fuel lift pump must be fitted' That is only about 9" so unless the tank is built into the counter, sits on the swim or something like that then the thing is always going to be struggling. This probably explains why brand new Kubota pumps are on E Bay, someone is fitting them to mowers or small plant and changing the mechanical pumps for electric.
  21. You have been unlucky for some reason. It might have nothing to do with your problem but the canal in pic. 5 has a bit of diesel floating on it, you might have a pinhole in the tank (?) My guess is that water has got into the tank, either from the inspection plate (Very sensible to fit that) or the filler cap or some sort of problem with the tube that the rudder shaft goes through. I fear that you might have to take the inspection plate off and have a good look and clean the thing out again - this might give you a clue where the water is coming from. Water in fuel is a sod to sort out. Personally I have not got much faith in fuel additives and my experience with cloudy fuel is that it will not burn but it might just damage the engine as it is incompressible. Good luck!
  22. You can get a visa that gives you up to approx 6 months and if you do as we do, spread your visits out a bit you can get a couple of weeks extra as the days 'drop off' the early months and you can add them to the later months. It is not ideal and takes a lot of working out but due to the f*****g stupidity of brexit it is the best that we can manage.
  23. That's tricky, I think I might consider fitting an electric fuel pump if all else fails, simple in/out hose connectors and a bit of dodgy wiring. If you find something that you can buy online then you can get it posted to me and I will drop it off, Sorry, can't think of an engineer but Limekiln chandlers in Stourport might know of someone, not too far to travel. PM me for address etc. Might be this one in Fuel Lift Pump for Kubota D905 D1105 D1305 430D V1205 V1505 Replaces 16285-52032 | eBay in which case the pipes have been cut off. Electric pump might be the way forward
  24. That one that I mentioned on E Bay is fitted to a range of Kubota engines.
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