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Hello all and help me out!
- 89Convert
- Scurvy Dog
- Posts: 15
- Joined: May 10th, 2020, 10:44 am
- Vessel Info: 2002 356 Carver
- Location: Kenosha, WI
- Has thanked: 6 times
- Been thanked: 3 times
Re: Hello all and help me out!
- Gag_Halfront
- Scurvy Dog
- Posts: 30
- Joined: June 27th, 2020, 6:42 pm
- Vessel Info: 1990 Carver Mariner 3297
- Location: Outer Banks
- Been thanked: 20 times
Re: Hello all and help me out!
- 1. Remove bridge ladders
2. Look at holes where perimeter screws used to be and wish the previous owner had left you the screws
3. Raise carefully so as to not bash the snot out of the courtesy lights.
We’ve gotten pretty good at it. Two tips that help me are to first lift the foreword edge of the deck while standing in the open engine room hatch with feet on the stringers and once lifted, jam a length of 2x4 under the edge. This way, when you lift the deck from the aft edge, it’s up out of the groove and can actually pivot like you’ll want it to. If you don’t do this, you will almost immediately regret it. The 2x4 doesn’t have to run the whole length of the foreword edge. It just has to be long enough to hold the deck up out of the groove.
Second, after getting the 2x4 in place, lift the aft edge a bit and loop a 25’ dock line (the eye splice end) under deck through the hatch and back up from behind the aft edge. Then feed the bitter end back through the eye, go up over the support for the bridge ladder, around the side deck hand hold, and back to a second person who can apply force and help support the weight as you realize that what you’re doing is impossible without standing on the generator which isn’t made to support your weight.
In my opinion, the ability to fairly quickly and easily (in boat repair terms) open up the entire engine room this way is one of the major selling points of these models. Your model may have a support to unscrew underneath or some other minor difference, but don’t be put off. The effort that goes into raising the deck like this is nothing compared to the effort of trying to do certain things with it down. You could spend a half hour getting the deck up or several hours trying to figure out how to get to the part you’re trying to repair while folding yourself into a pretzel or laying on the deck with your head in the hole wishing your arms were 3 feet longer and had six more elbows.
Good luck! Let us know how it goes.
- km1125
- Admiral
- Posts: 3500
- Joined: February 28th, 2017, 6:04 pm
- Has thanked: 69 times
- Been thanked: 1043 times
Re: Hello all and help me out!
Gag_Halfront wrote:Source of the post Mine is a 3297 so the specifics may be slightly different, but it has a similar arrangement. Our basic process is:1. Remove bridge ladders
2. Look at holes where perimeter screws used to be and wish the previous owner had left you the screws
3. Raise carefully so as to not bash the snot out of the courtesy lights.
We’ve gotten pretty good at it. Two tips that help me are to first lift the foreword edge of the deck while standing in the open engine room hatch with feet on the stringers and once lifted, jam a length of 2x4 under the edge. This way, when you lift the deck from the aft edge, it’s up out of the groove and can actually pivot like you’ll want it to. If you don’t do this, you will almost immediately regret it. The 2x4 doesn’t have to run the whole length of the foreword edge. It just has to be long enough to hold the deck up out of the groove.
Second, after getting the 2x4 in place, lift the aft edge a bit and loop a 25’ dock line (the eye splice end) under deck through the hatch and back up from behind the aft edge. Then feed the bitter end back through the eye, go up over the support for the bridge ladder, around the side deck hand hold, and back to a second person who can apply force and help support the weight as you realize that what you’re doing is impossible without standing on the generator which isn’t made to support your weight.
In my opinion, the ability to fairly quickly and easily (in boat repair terms) open up the entire engine room this way is one of the major selling points of these models. Your model may have a support to unscrew underneath or some other minor difference, but don’t be put off. The effort that goes into raising the deck like this is nothing compared to the effort of trying to do certain things with it down. You could spend a half hour getting the deck up or several hours trying to figure out how to get to the part you’re trying to repair while folding yourself into a pretzel or laying on the deck with your head in the hole wishing your arms were 3 feet longer and had six more elbows.
Good luck! Let us know how it goes.
It's posts like this that make this site so valuable. None of that would be in a "service manual"!!
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