79MERC1150
Seaman Apprentice
- Joined
- Aug 10, 2008
- Messages
- 43
I is strickly a fresh water boat, and very clean. Finding her felt like I had won the lottery. My mechanic gave her a thumbs up, as the previous owner had replaced the bellows, shift cable, and all of the rubber parts.
We were all set for a great weekend. Relatives drove in from several states, five of our 11 grandchildren were present. We rented a boat-house and a pontoon boat on Fontana Lake North Carolina. We took the recently aquired Mach I, and our trusty 1980 Astroglas bass rig with the 115 Merc outboard. Saturday I drove back to the marina to get some fuel for the stern drive, and the wife needed some stuff from the house. I uinstructed the young man at the fuel pump to top off the tank, and tie the boat up in a slip for about an hour, and we would be back.
We returned after our errand, paid for 11 gallons of fuel, and boarded the boat. The first thing that I noticed is that the fuel guage had not moved. Thinking the gauge was stuck, I drove out, and watched the gauge. I could see the gauge rocking, but never moving from the 3/4 position. Something told me that they had pumped the fuel into the water tank. We returned to the marina. When I asked the attendent which fill he pumped the gas into, he pointed to the black water fill, marked water.
I turned on the sink, and guess what? It was GAS!
What I have done so far. Ran the water pump, pumping the gas via the stern shower into portable gas containers, which I will dispose of at the local waste disposal site. They will take contaminated gas for a fee. The boat has a 20 gallon water system, and we were able to pump 21 gallons out of it, so I think that most of the gas is out of it. When the system ran dry, I shut it down, and poured a 1/2 bottle of DAWN dish soap into the water fill, then filled it with lake water until it ran over. I capped it and have not done anything else with it yet, as we just got off of the water this evening.
What else should I do? Thanks for any and all imput. We are sort of sick about the safety and the fate of our nice find old stern drive.