Hi David, 

Congrats on getting the 34+. I've owned mine for 3 years and still think I 
could not have possibly gotten a better boat for what we do.  The promise 
is that is gives you plentiful room and comfort at the marina / anchor and 
runs like a bat out of he$$ around the cans..   It does just that. 

All your questions are really straightforward. 

Exhaust hose:  I replaced mine last year, it's not that bad. Your idea of 
connecting the old one to the new one is excellent.  I just wrestled my 
old one out and taped a fiberglass wiring rod to the new one to pull some 
/ guide it.  The trick is to remove all the aft stateroom cushions then 
remove the fuel tank access panel and the wooden blocks that are screwed / 
wedged-in securing the fuel tank and find a way to jack-up tank to 
facilitate threading the new hose in under it ( I used 2 x 2's) . 

The challenge to thread the new hose is to line it up between the exposed 
strut bolts.  Stick to the original hose construction / diameter and 
you'll be fine.  It's a bit of a sweaty wrestling match but you and 1 
other guy should be able to knock it out in less than 1 hour. 

"Through-Hulls" 

None of what you mentioned is below the waterline at rest. They get 
dipped-in some when motoring or sailing in excess of 5 or so knots but 
that's nothing that the standard siphon loops can't handle. The 34+ is the 
last of the Canadian C&C's and after 35 + odd years of designing racer 
cruisers they had it down.. Rob Ball knew what he was doing. 

FYI, all through hulls on mine are Marelon.  I close them all everytime I 
leave the boat and they works well, 

Also, there are no cockpit or deck scuppers on the boat.  All cockpit 
/deck water simply flows out the stern / swim platform area in a modern 
open stern / sport boat style.  On my boat there's a drain for the propane 
locker, also well designed.  No need to seal / mess with it as propane is 
heavier than air and flows down the drain like water with its exit above 
the waterline at rest  There's no quadrant well.  On my boat The rudder 
shaft goes up to the quadrant that is mounted on top and flush with the 
cockpit sub-floor.  All that is easily accessible by simply removing the 
triangular fiberglass cover. 

Feel free to PM me for more details on how to tune the boat  / other 
questions of you want. 


-Francois Rivard
1990 34+ "Take Five"
Lake Lanier, GA

 





Subject: Re: Stus-List 34+ transom thru-hulls
Message-ID: <snt152-w7315fc52d9f459dde543fda0...@phx.gbl>
Content-Type: text/plain; charset="iso-8859-1"

I said "appear" to be below the waterline because the boat's not in the 
water, isn't going in the water anytime soon, and I've never actually 
seen one of these in the water :)  All four thru-hulls are under the 
transom counter and below the boot stripe as well as below the waterline
 as defined by the existing bottom paint, so I have to assume they are 
submerged with the boat floating level.  Given their location in the 
bowels of the stern lazarettes, I know accessing them is a pain but I'm 
paranoid enough that I'd close them when I'm leaving the boat on her 
mooring and not returning for a span of days at a time.  On second 
though, I'd have to leave the two small ones open because those are 
scuppers, so no sense in valves on them at all.

Here's a pic of the two port side thru hulls, big one is the exhaust.  2 
more on the stbd side in the same configuration.

So I'm the proud new owner of a '90 34+, and the first project I bit off 
was replacement of the exhaust hose from the muffer back, including the 
thru-hull.

First off, this is not going to be fun because the hose runs under the 
fuel tank and span of the cockpit under the water heater where it is 
completely inaccessible.  I'm hoping I'll be able to pull the new hose 
through by clamping it to the old hose with a double-ended barb, but it 
seems like it's an awful tight fit under the tank.  If anyone else has 
done this job and has any suggestions, I'm all ears.

Second, the thru-hulls themselves.  There are 4 thru-hulls just under the 
transom - the exhaust, the two drains for the propane tank & steering 
quadrant well, and the bilge pump.  All 4 are plastic mushroom-head 
thru-hulls, and I want to replace at least the exhaust thru-hull with a 
new marelon one.  Question:  none of these thru-hulls have seacocks on 
them, which seems odd (and unwise) to me because they appear to be below 
the waterline.  What are your thoughts on putting a marelon ball valve on 
the new thru hull while I'm at it?  I'm tempted to replace all 4 of them 
with new thru-hull and valves.  Am I just being paranoid?

Thanks all.  I'm thrilled to have this boat and I'm sure I'll be pestering 
the heck out of this board!

-Dave
 1990 C&C 34+ "Faith Anne"



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