So October 1st came and went, and to be a real party pooper, we pulled the boat early this year to get some well deserved work done. With all the rain we've had, and the lake being up >3 ft, the river rose and left me about 10 inches of clearance on the main drag bridge to clear. Its only 2 blocks from my dock to the lift well at the boatyard. I ended up pulling the radar antenna (radome) off the arch and made the trip with about 6 inches to spare. The water rose another two inches yesterday and is usually 2 days behind the rain with the tributaries in the county continuing to feed the West Twin river. The firm 20Kn wind didnt help either.
About 2 days before that I at least got around to an oil change. If youve never done boat work, you may appreciate this: You cant pull the drain plug from the pan with an inch of bottom clearance. I run the 454s for 1/2 hour dockside to get them warm. Then I pull out the oil pressure senders and attach a 1/8 pipe fitting and a hose to a bucket. Fire them up at idle and the oil pump empties the crankcase in about 20 seconds. Shut down and change the filter and refill. Oil was good and black. Added a 1/2 qt of STP for the zinc (ZDDP) for the cams and 7 quarts of oil, and called it done. Went home and did the oil in the BAD LAD as well. Getting that one ready for the storage locker this weekend. Ambition stamina, and age seem to go hand in hand. Today was a kitchen sink drain piping job; another favorite LOL...
Got my new (1971) quadrajet all apart and cleaned in the harbor fright ultrasonic cleaner. Turned out good. Picked up the new choke pull off today and the secondary was ordered from the mfgr. and due here next week.
Tomorrow Im gonna start winterizing the boat. Thats a two day process draining all the water, installing pink and green anti freeze through the systems, then next week start the shrink wrap frame and wrap it. Thats another 2 full days. Then an additional day pulling the floating docks to the boatyard with the 14 foot aluminum boat and dragging them out on the ground. Then the real work can begin haha... Bill