[PSUBS-MAILIST] Dive report: Snoopy at Seneca
hank pronk via Personal_Submersibles
personal_submersibles at psubs.org
Sat Jun 6 12:55:07 EDT 2015
DW's come from Canada :-)--------------------------------------------
On Sat, 6/6/15, Private via Personal_Submersibles <personal_submersibles at psubs.org> wrote:
Subject: Re: [PSUBS-MAILIST] Dive report: Snoopy at Seneca
To: "Personal Submersibles General Discussion" <personal_submersibles at psubs.org>
Received: Saturday, June 6, 2015, 10:45 AM
Thanks for the offer, but
Snoopy is 12 volt. The controllers are Zavsza brand called
Canakit. These Canadians... nothing good comes from them,
eh?
> On Jun 6, 2015, at 8:20 AM, hank pronk via
Personal_Submersibles <personal_submersibles at psubs.org>
wrote:
>
> Alec,
> I don't know what type of speed
controller you are using, but I like and use Curtis golf
cart controllers. They are rated for huge amperage and
seem bullet proof. I have an extra 36V controller I can
send you to try out. They use a 10 OHM potentiometer for
the throttle. They also have a battery protection mode, a
sort of get home conservation mode.
>
I labeled the motor in Gamma for a jumper cable, so that I
can get home without the controller. As you said it is
electronic and it will fail.
> If you
want the controller send your address of list.
> Hank
>
--------------------------------------------
> On Fri, 6/5/15, Alec Smyth via
Personal_Submersibles <personal_submersibles at psubs.org>
wrote:
>
> Subject:
[PSUBS-MAILIST] Dive report: Snoopy at Seneca
> To: "Personal Submersibles General
Discussion" <personal_submersibles at psubs.org>
> Received: Friday, June 5, 2015, 6:16 PM
>
> Hello friends,
> I just got back from a dive trip to Seneca
with
> Dan Lance and thought I'd
share how it went. This was
> supposed to
be a two sub trip with Scott Waters, but
> unfortunately a business emergency
intervened and it ended
> up being just
Snoopy.
> On the way up the weather was
terrible, with
> driving rain so heavy I
could barely see the lines on the
> road.
It had been raining heavily for several days
> previously. Three times there were
emergency announcements
> about floods,
large hail, and damaging winds, and the closer
> I got the harder it rained. The problem
with all that rain
> is that in your
typical lake, the runoff ruins visibility
> for weeks. That is what happened last year
when Trustworthy
> and Snoopy
rendezvoused at Summersville Lake, and it looked
> very much like this would be a repeat.
I'm happy to say
> Seneca must be
rain-proof, because the deluge only reduced
> the visibility in the top fifty feet or
so, and even those
> were clearer than
most lakes.
> Here's a few things we
learned:
> 1) Of props and shroudsThe
stern
> thruster speed control was dead
on arrival, although I had
> tested it
successfully before leaving. I opened up the
> enclosure, pressed down all the spade
connectors, and found
> it now worked -
so attributed the issue to road bumps.
>
However, it died within a minute on the first dive. I had
a
> spare speed controller, so switched
it out.
> The replacement died within
five minutes on the
> second dive. This
time at least the cause was obvious, the
> prop was jammed by weeds. The current
Minnkota props have a
> little twist at
the end of the blades, and Snoopy's
>
shroud is made with almost no clearance. The little twist
to
> the blade tip causes any object
coming between prop and
> shroud to jam
tight, and had already smoked one controller
> during the convention in the Keys. I'm
going to put the
> prop on the lathe and
take off the tips to eliminate the
>
pinching effect and to reduce the amperage draw a little
so
> the motor goes lighter on the speed
controller. By the way,
> the speed
controller was protected by a fuse rated a little
> below the controller spec current draw, so
perhaps those
> specs are optimistic.
Anyway, as a result of the double
>
failure all of our dives were done on just the side
> thrusters because I was out of spare speed
controllers.
> Lesson for next sub:
Design the electrical system with a
>
controller bypass, so I can operate thrusters with simple
> on/off switches if a speed controller
fails. They're
> electronic, they
will fail.
> 2) Of air bubbles in
compensation oil
> Snoopy is now
routinely diving deep (250 ft) and
> this
has showed up a puzzling issue with the thrusters. They
> were feeble during dives, one died
altogether on one dive,
> and they kept
coming up leaking oil. At first we thought the
> seals were failing, perhaps due to some
chemical
> incompatibility. We found
suitable seals at an Amish farm
> supply
store that sold things like tractor spares (viva
> trolling motor simplicity!) When I
disconnected the bladder
> hose I got
quite well sprayed with oil. The motor turned out
> to be pressurized.
>
Previously, I thought if one had a small quantity
> of air left in the system it would not be
an issue so long
> as the compression
volume of that air could be handled by
>
the flexibility of the hose (aka compensation bladder.)
> Wrong. I now think what happens is that if
the dive exceeds
> the pressure rating of
the shaft seal and there is a bubble
> of
any size, you will get water added to the oil and the
> bubble stores the pressure. Upon
surfacing, the bubble
> squeezes oil and
water back out until the pressure in the
> motor falls to the "cracking
pressure" of the
> seal. Thus, you
get an oil leak even though the seals are
> fine. Lesson: Zero tolerance with oil
bubbles, even a small
> bubble is
unacceptable if you are diving deep. I'm going
> to put set screws on the motor caps so I
can get rid of the
> bubbles more
easily.
> 3) An easy way to add
> buoyancySnoopy's buoyancy is adjusted
by
> placing trawl floats in PVC tubes.
On one occasion, the
> oncoming
passenger's weight required the addition of
> just one float (i.e. the new guy weighed
seven pounds more
> than the one getting
off). The support diver wasn't
>
suited up and the water was 42 degrees, so I just pushed
a
> float under the lip of the forward
MBT. It worked like a
> charm, and the
float even stayed in place throughout the tow
> back to the ramp. Lesson: You can easily
add a few floats
> for buoyancy on a
standard K sub, no special tubes
>
required.
> Most of our dives were along
a very steep
> incline, not quite a wall
but more like a series of ledges
> and
very steep slopes. Between the steep terrain and the
> good visibility, the K250 dome for once
offered a really
> good view. We
typically made our way down the slopes using
> very slightly negative buoyancy, trailing
the back corner of
> a skid on the slope.
Looking aft, you could see a zigzagging
>
trail of silt hanging motionless in the water and tracing
> our path. The sub compresses with depth,
so slightly
> positive buoyancy at the
surface turned into slightly
> negative
at depth, but we're speaking of just a couple
> of pounds and not anything that caused
difficulty. In fact
> at one point we
stopped dead in the water four or five feet
> above a flat bottom for about five
minutes, just waiting for
> a
pre-arranged touch-point call on comms. The sub
didn't
> rise or sink an inch, she
just hung there completely
> immobile for
five minutes. At about 140 feet the visibility
> would improve significantly, and the water
changed from
> green to blue. It looked
like ocean instead of lake water.
>
I'll post a video, but that'll take a few days to
> put together. The only
"incidents" we had were a
>
cold bath we took when we closed the hatch over a corner
of
> the crew's shirt, and when we
got hooked on a log at 220
> feet -
fortunately reversing got us right off
>
it.
>
> Best,
> Alec
>
>
>
>
>
> -----Inline Attachment Follows-----
>
>
_______________________________________________
> Personal_Submersibles mailing list
> Personal_Submersibles at psubs.org
> http://www.psubs.org/mailman/listinfo.cgi/personal_submersibles
>
>
>
_______________________________________________
> Personal_Submersibles mailing list
> Personal_Submersibles at psubs.org
> http://www.psubs.org/mailman/listinfo.cgi/personal_submersibles
_______________________________________________
Personal_Submersibles mailing list
Personal_Submersibles at psubs.org
http://www.psubs.org/mailman/listinfo.cgi/personal_submersibles
More information about the Personal_Submersibles
mailing list