My Native Manta Ray 14 is only a few years old. I store it inside my walk-out basement, so it rarely gets sunlight exposure that could weaken the hull. Therefore I was surprised when I noticed a gallon of water inside the hull after a trip a few weeks ago. The Manta has its drainhole on one side rather than on the end -- this does not drain the hull effectively or completely. I had to remove the front hatch cover and first bail out water with a cup, then use a chamois to soak up the rest.
I did not think much about it until after the next trip, when it happened again. I thought that maybe I had rubbed a hole in the keel (like I did with my Ocean Kayak Drifter the previous summer), but the keel was intact. I thought that perhaps some water had entered through some of the screws used to attach accessories, so I tightened all of them (none were particularly loose anyway).
When I went out today in very calm water, there was no way that waves or spray could come on top of the hull and work into the bilge area. Yet at the end of 2.5 hours, I found nearly a gallon of water inside the hull again.
When I got home, I put one end of the kayak on my front porch and the other end on a small table on the lawn in order to elevate the boat and keep it approximately level. I then started filling the inner hull with water. After it was about 1/3 full (5 minutes of garden hose time), I leaned down and looked at the underside of the hull. I was relieved to find one location that had a steady drip of water through the hull. Now the detective work was done.
It turns out that there are 4 sets of scupper holes coming out on the bottom of the hull. Three sets come through from the top of the boat, but one of the sets is a blind tube that never reaches the top surface. I suspect it was molded into the hull for structural reasons. It was around the port side blind scupper hole that I saw water dripping from a 2" long hairline crack along the edge of the hole.
The bottom of my boat has many scratches -- cosmetically unpleasant, but of little consequence. There is no way that I would have discovered which of these was the leaking culprit without filling the hull with water and watching for the drippage.
I dried off the hull and let it sit in the hot sun in preparation for a patch job using Goop. The late afternoon thunderstorm we had in Annapolis put a hold on the job until tomorrow.
I would like to patch the crack from the inside, but the location is too far from any of the hatches into the bilge area. Instead, I plan to work on the outside and fill the entire scupper hole on that side with Goop, then feather out a layer to cover the crack with some extra overlap. I may go ahead and fill the other side too while I am at it. I have had good luck with Goop and hope it will take care of the problem (Side note: I have bought Marine Goop at West Marine before -- I think I paid more than $10 for a tube. I found regular Goop at Home Depot in the glue aisle for $5).
I did not think much about it until after the next trip, when it happened again. I thought that maybe I had rubbed a hole in the keel (like I did with my Ocean Kayak Drifter the previous summer), but the keel was intact. I thought that perhaps some water had entered through some of the screws used to attach accessories, so I tightened all of them (none were particularly loose anyway).
When I went out today in very calm water, there was no way that waves or spray could come on top of the hull and work into the bilge area. Yet at the end of 2.5 hours, I found nearly a gallon of water inside the hull again.
When I got home, I put one end of the kayak on my front porch and the other end on a small table on the lawn in order to elevate the boat and keep it approximately level. I then started filling the inner hull with water. After it was about 1/3 full (5 minutes of garden hose time), I leaned down and looked at the underside of the hull. I was relieved to find one location that had a steady drip of water through the hull. Now the detective work was done.
It turns out that there are 4 sets of scupper holes coming out on the bottom of the hull. Three sets come through from the top of the boat, but one of the sets is a blind tube that never reaches the top surface. I suspect it was molded into the hull for structural reasons. It was around the port side blind scupper hole that I saw water dripping from a 2" long hairline crack along the edge of the hole.
The bottom of my boat has many scratches -- cosmetically unpleasant, but of little consequence. There is no way that I would have discovered which of these was the leaking culprit without filling the hull with water and watching for the drippage.
I dried off the hull and let it sit in the hot sun in preparation for a patch job using Goop. The late afternoon thunderstorm we had in Annapolis put a hold on the job until tomorrow.
I would like to patch the crack from the inside, but the location is too far from any of the hatches into the bilge area. Instead, I plan to work on the outside and fill the entire scupper hole on that side with Goop, then feather out a layer to cover the crack with some extra overlap. I may go ahead and fill the other side too while I am at it. I have had good luck with Goop and hope it will take care of the problem (Side note: I have bought Marine Goop at West Marine before -- I think I paid more than $10 for a tube. I found regular Goop at Home Depot in the glue aisle for $5).
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