The ongoing saga of the water pump
While the vintage-car-man-who-can-fix-it worked on
our pump, we carried on exploring · monsters on the beach ·
crushed rosemary and baby conquistadors in the wake of the · a Frisbee when I attempted to bake more bread · a family of kittens living under the bridge to pontoon B · David and Nancy (ONS JOOL) loitering on pontoon G.
A sand monster on the beach.
Crushed rosemary in the wake of the procession of
the Madonna for
Baby conquistadors.
The Frisbee loaf.
“Mummy, can we have a kitten? Mummy, can we have a kitten? Mummy, can we have a kitten? Mummy, can we have a…”
Bryn, David (ONS JOOL), Bethany and Bratz. ALTIKA We spotted a very swish aluminium boat on pontoon
C and couldn’t resist a closer look. ALTIKA is cutting edge, 41-foot, hybrid
diesel-electric, twin-propellered monohull. Alongside many other extremely
clever features, she has a dinghy garage and dagger boards that help minimize
heeling. We went out on her to help Johan and Christine collect data on her
systems for feedback for the architect. We spent many a happy hour discussing
films, IT, engines and
ALTIKA.
Bryn at the tiller. The ongoing saga of the water
pump Unfortunately, the vintage-car-man-who-can-fix-it, couldn’t. To be fair, to be able to fix something, one needs to have something left to fix. In our case there was nothing left of the pump, so we had a phone call from the engineer to say that the heat-exchanger was fine and had been cleaned and pressure tested, but that the pump was f*^%”!d (technical term, apparently).
This is an ex-pump. This pump is deceased. He offered to sell us a brand new engine, but being rather short of cash, we decided to carry on searching. So David carried on trawling the internet, Mike (TENGY) carried on trawling dealers in the UK (Volvo and otherwise) and the engineer ‘phoned every dealer he knew in Spain and The Netherlands – even driving around the breakers yards of Seville looking for a compatible pump (apparently the water pump from the old Peugeot XDP4/90 engine would have done). Eventually we managed to track down a complete
pump assembly in
Going over the bridge that we went under last time – the bridge over the Rio Guadiana. Cabo Trafalgar and
beyond Having access to the hire car, we explored further
down the coast. Well actually we got very lost between Rota and Barbate trying
to find the coast road (not helped by the fact that I was navigator and was
using the road map in our guidebook with a scale of the whole of
Annual auditions for the part of ‘Weed’ in Bill and Ben the Flowerpot Men.
The lighthouse at Cabo Trafalgar.
Shipwreck at the foot of Capo Trafalgar. We did school on the move – history (The Battle of
Trafalgar), art (Van Gogh’s Sunflowers and Turner’s The Fighting Temeraire), geology
(sandstone formation and erosion), and music (a track-by-track dissection of Classic Experience II). I don’t know
about the kids, but I learned that the most significant naval battle ever fought
in European history took place off Cape Trafalgar when the English Fleet (led by
Admiral Nelson) defeated the combined naval forces of
Sandstone and squids. We took advantage of having the car to do a big
tin and bottle shop, just in case they don’t sell food in Technical hitch no.
544 While the engineers were down the engine hole fitting the new pump, we carried on getting ready to go to sea, topping up the water, stowing all breakables, putting all our bottles down the bilges, etc, only to discover that our bilges were full of fresh water (OK, not full exactly, but 2 inches more than there had been before we topped up the water tanks). Further investigation revealed a leak from the top of the port-side water tank, which appeared to be coming from a water gauge that was re-fitted when we had all the work done in Pwllheli. This might explain why we always seem to have 2 inches of water in the bilges (which we though was coming down the mast), and that lovely bilgy aroma that flares up when whenever we have guests! After removing the 5 different types of screws (including wood screws and self-tapping screws) securing the offending gauge, David drilled and tapped the whole arrangement back into place, and we mopped out the bilges again. …and 545 We must have been daft to think that anything to do with our engine would be simple. It turns out that the heat exchanger had been cleaned but not pressure tested. Did it leak? Of course it leaked – in this case it leaked €15 worth of coolant from the freshwater system into the salt water system just for starters. Watch this space! |