And a diesel engine would have died the same death! I have an A4 in my 38 and 
am very satisfied with it for my uses. Anybody wants to get rid of one, contact 
me, I'll probably buy it for spare parts or to rebuild and sell. Great engine! 
And I have never read a story of a boat with an A4 blowing up. Fuel consumption 
on my 38 is a shade over a gallon/hr. I worry more about fuel age than range, 
but an A4 will run on damn near anything (don't ask too many questions on that 
one, but cheap vodka works! among other flammable liquids). No more than basic 
shade tree mechanic skills needed to maintain or even rebuild them, I've 
rebuilt two. Most problems are related to the ignition (there are two nice 
electronic modules available now days) and carb (clean fuel, just like a diesel 
but easier). 
James Taylor
S/V Delaney
C&C 38 
Oriental, NC
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Martin DeYoung 
  To: cnc-list@cnc-list.com 
  Sent: Wednesday, January 29, 2014 5:55 PM
  Subject: Re: Stus-List Atomic 4


  >. a hardcore sailor.

  >. has water in cylinders.

   

  The summer of 1979 I was delivering a C&C 39 back to Seattle from Hawaii 
(post Transpac).  We planned to cut through the NE Pacific High by motoring.  
On deck was 30 gallons of gasoline to fuel the Atomic 4.  We had been powering 
for +-12 hours and stopped the engine to swim and make a SSB call.

   

  The A4 never started again.  We were +-1,500 miles from Cape Flattery in a 
large area of very light wind.  The A4 had been sucking salt water in through 
the carb.  A cooling hose had chafed enough to allow a fine spray of raw salt 
water to be ingested.  There was enough water in the cylinders to rust/freeze 
them solid.

   

  We pulled the head and used all of our shade tree mechanic tricks to bring 
the A4 back to life but to no avail.  The "Midnight Special" had become a pure 
sailboat in the middle of the NE Pacific High.  Our worst day's progress was 30 
miles.  It took 29 days to make Seattle.  We rationed food and water.  At one 
point, close to land not far from Port Townsend my then girlfriend, now wife 
stated "get me close to land, I'm swimming for it".

   

  We sailed the 39 directly into its slip after +- 2,500 miles with 30 gallons 
of gasoline still on deck.

   

  Martin

  Calypso

  1971 C&C 43

  Seattle




   

  From: CnC-List [mailto:cnc-list-boun...@cnc-list.com] On Behalf Of Aaron Rouhi
  Sent: Wednesday, January 29, 2014 1:57 PM
  To: cnc-list@cnc-list.com
  Subject: Re: Stus-List Atomic 4

   

  Thanks for all your replies. Great suggestions as always.

   

  My friend is indeed a hardcore sailor. He just sailed from St Marteen to Fort 
Myers single handed and without a working engine. The cost of switching to a 
Diesel is prohibitive at this moment so he wants to stay with A4. I just spoke 
to him and he knows he has water in cylinders but not sure if it's a crack head 
or block. Moyer is a great place to start. I've forwarded all of your emails to 
him. 

   

  Thank you again!

   

  Cheers,

  Aaron R.

  Admiral Maggie,

  1979 C&C 30 MK1 #540

  Annapolis, MD

   



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