I am still in shock over the sinking of Rescue
34, our 16’ zodiac rescue boat. If I wasn’t there to see it myself I would
never have believed it. To go from floating to swimming in a minute, it was
that fast. One minute Rich G. is telling me “Hey Chet! We got water
coming in“, the next thing I know I’m watching the dive flag go
underwater and the whole hull disappear. There was no time to do anything to
save it.
The question that kept popping into my thoughts
was “How could this happen?”. One thing I know the team did was take care of
Rescue 34. It was washed and the motor was flushed out after every time it was
used. If the owner’s manual said to do something, it was done. In the spring
before putting the boat to hard use over the summer, Rescue 34 was gone over
from bow to stern, motor serviced, tubes inspected, all equipment (IE life
jackets, lines, lights, batteries) were thoroughly gone over and if it needed
to be replaced, it was. The boat was even kept inside out of the weather
all year long.
After doing some research, I found a few cases
online of the hull attachment points or other seams coming apart. This is
exactly what happened to Rescue 34. During our preseason checks these points
were checked and never showed any signs of failure. I was surprised that I
couldn’t find more information about this catastrophic failure, but decided at
least I understood the process that caused our boat to sink.
This weekend we decided to take a trip to the
Bay Head Yacht Club to look at the kind of boat we are hoping will be our
replacement for Rescue 34. We ran into Buddy who is the Dock Master and started
asking questions about his Ribcraft. We asked how he liked it, did it hold up
well, all the things you ask while considering purchasing a new boat. In talking
to him, we shared what had happened during the sinking of Rescue 34 and he knew
exactly what we were talking about.
Buddy took us over to his fleet of 9 Zodiacs and said to take a look at the
rear attachment points. Every one of his boats had the attachment point fail.
He told us the failure rate was 100%. I took pictures of the failures on
his boats for our own records and each one reminded me of Rescue 34. Buddy went
on to say he has to budget money to re-tube three boats every year. Five years
was what he said the tubes last.
His
Ribcraft on the other hand was over ten years old and was still working well
with no problems. The tubes were a little faded, but were not showing any signs
of attachment problems even with the hard use of yacht club and being out all
summer in the weather. I hope that our replacement for Rescue 34 will serve us
as well as Bay Head Yacht Club’s has served them.
I want to thank Buddy
the Dock Master at the Bay Head Yacht Club for taking
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