Always Read the Directions near Fort Myers Beach
Boating
by boatguy Ed
"After all else fails," my
dear old pappy used to say, "read the directions!" Who
among us hasn't added to much hardener to the epoxy and wondered why
it was smoking? I've screwed the pooch on many occasions but from
the pros I expect better?
Whenever I walk into a boat repair
place I always look for the older mechanics. That may sound
politically incorrect or age bias but it has been my experience that
the younger mechanics may be book smarter but they don't have the
hands-on time. Case in point was a new starter that I didn't need.
Whenever your boat won't start or even
turnover it is most likely the battery. The Florida heat is as hard
on batteries as the New England winters. Long ago the boat wouldn't
start so I called the service department who sent a clean cut young
mechanic over to the boat slip. After a very short diagnosis he
exclaimed, "You need a new starter!"
"How are the batteries," I
asked hoping that the infinitely cheaper batteries were the problem.
The mechanic said he checked the batteries and they were fine so I
told him to replace the starter which he did. Several hundreds of
dollars later the boat still wouldn't start. Same symptoms, same
diagnosis; bad starter. Defective starter right out of the box. So
who pays the labor bill?
The service manger shrugged his young
shoulders and said, "I'll see if I can get some help from the
distributor but I wouldn't count on it." Then he chuckled and
continued, "You know what the word boat means, huh? Break Out
Another Thousand!" I had to leave the building!
On the way back to the boat I spotted
an older mechanic carrying his tools back to the shop and I asked him
what the odds were of a starter going bad sitting on a warehouse
shelf. "Pretty low but you never know."
I explained the circumstances to him
and he just got this weird half smile on his face. A wry sort of
smile that would make anyone uncomfortable especially if your surgeon
wore it. "What are you thinking," I asked.
"I'll take a look at it after
lunch," he said and then disappeared into the service department
office
I waited until three in the afternoon
before I called the service manager. "I've got good news for
you. Your boat is ready and there is no charge!"
"Wha.....t? No charge, are you
kidding?" The service manager said he would just chock up the
cost to mechanic training and said I should hurry over and get the
boat because they were about to close for the day.
The boat was in the water when I
arrived with the keys in it but I couldn't find the three main
players in this little drama. When I touched the ignition key the
engine roared to life just as it had for many years. I inspected the
engine and to my surprise I found my OLD starter in place instead of
the new one. I opened the battery box and my old batteries stared up
at me. I was dumbfounded but happy so I went back to my slip.
This turned into a great debate at the
"Dead End Canal Yacht Club" but no one came up with the
answer. Then one day I ran into the older mechanic at the grocery
store. "I haven't seen you around the marina lately? I wanted to
ask what the no-charge problem was with my boat?"
"I don't work there anymore. I'm
not sure if your problem had anything to do with that but I was tired
of the inexperience," he said matter-of-factly
"So you can tell me what the
problem was, I hope?" He chuckled, "Oh, you didn't notice
the new battery selector switch?" Battery selector switch? I'd
forgotten I even had a battery selector switch because it sits in the
battery compartment and most of the time I just leave it on the
'both' rather than selecting the off position or the battery one or
two position.
In my own defense, the switch was out
of sight unless you get on your knees and peer way back. I could turn
the selector switch without looking at it. "So how did you know
it was the switch," I begged.
"I called our distributor and
asked them to bench test the old one and it spun just fine. I checked
the batteries and they were older but still okay. The starter wasn't
getting any juice so....," he didn't finish because he didn't
have to. Who'da thunk?
It makes me wonder though? Would that
service manager have left the new starter in and billed me for the
new selector switch if I hadn't asked for a second opinion? My best
guess is that he would have.
Boat Safe! Send questions and comments to boatguiEd@aol.com.
Boat Safe! Send questions and comments to boatguiEd@aol.com.
This blog/column is meant for educational purposes only. Any resemblance to real persons, living or dead, is purely coincidental. Void
where prohibited. Some assembly required. Do not read while operating a
vehicle or heavy machinery. Keep sending those great questions and
comments or I'm going to stop doing this, I'm not kidding! (Contact)
DeadEndCanalYC@aol.com
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