Ventilation
Basics
By Don Casey
If you sail your boat just on weekends,
maybe you don’t give much thought to ventilation. Opening
the hatches and portlights (if your portlights open) when you
are on board seemingly provides plenty of ventilation in good
weather. When the weather is bad, you’re usually not aboard.
However, if you plan to use your boat in more than just fair weather,
the level of ventilation found in most production boats will quickly
prove to be inadequate. Even if longer-term sailing is not in
your immediate future, improving closed-boat ventilation can be
significantly beneficial to the health of the boat. Let’s
look at this latter aspect first.
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Just cracking
the forward hatch as this boat owner has done can help
move a lot of air through a boat, but for the times when
he or she is away and the boat's battened down, another
system is required. Hence the cowl vents and Dorade boxes
that adorn the cabintop here. |
Boat Health Think about how hot
the interior of your car gets when parked outside on a summer
day. Similar heating takes place inside your boat every day—a
reality you are no doubt well aware of. Sure the interior cools
down when you open the hatches, but
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most
days the boat remains closed. The buildup of heat that inevitably
occurs—day after day after day—is not doing your boat
any good.
Why is this so? Because the hotter
the air, the more moisture it can hold. Water in the bilge vaporizes—like
cloud formation—and on a hot day the air inside your boat
can be as much as three times as wet as that outside. Even if
your bilge is bone dry, the heating and cooling cycle of an inadequately
ventilated cabin acts like a heat pump. The warming air sucks
in moisture from the outside, which condenses out when the cabin
cools at night. A few days of this cycle and the interior of your
boat is as wet as a rain forest. Believe me, this is doing damage
to your boat.
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| Without the right gear, it's difficult to
keep a boat's interior properly ventilated during inclement
weather, and that can plant the seed of future damage to
both the boat and the crew's health. |
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