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#1 |
Senior Member
Join Date: May 2008
Location: La Jolla
Posts: 189
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Hey darkhorse, what did you catch that yellow on?
Just curious. Thanks, Willy |
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#2 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Mar 2007
Location: Seven minutes from the launch!
Posts: 987
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Thanks for the idea Doug, automatic float switch, that's a good one. After thinking about it, the 12gph is probably plenty, but I would still prefer overkill. In case of a real emergency situation 25 miles offshore, I'm going with the 500gph (the Yamaha look). I wouldn't mind turning the pump off after it did it's job, in short order.
Willy, I caught this fish on the flyline, 10" Greenback, #1 owner hook, on #30 flouro, in 90ft, around the 3/4. That afternoon I peddled past close to ten different schools of Yellowtail. Some were pretty stealthy, quietly puddling with a slight (but obvious) surface disturbance. A couple other schools didn't have a care in the world, violently boiling on surface bait, and moving plenty of water around. I was out this afternoon (monday) with no boats, and no signs of life on the surface (major change from the past couple of days). A strong uphill current and a distinct visability line around the 1/2 (from 5-8ft vis at the condo then close to 15ft vis around the 3/4). No guarantee, but any day now could go off. Good luck!
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#3 |
Junior
Join Date: May 2006
Posts: 7
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An old retired merchant told me once..."A scared man with a bucket will out bail any pump!".........
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#4 |
Senior Member
Join Date: Mar 2005
Posts: 150
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If you have a bait tank pump on board, consider rigging so you can simply take it out of the bait tank and use as a bilge,
(using an old back packing adage of having two or more uses for everything you carry) ![]() |
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#5 |
Member
Join Date: Apr 2008
Location: San Marcos
Posts: 37
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Nice one man! We were paddling the AM shift all over place por nada!! Way to get on em!
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#6 | |
Guerro Grande
Join Date: Jan 2006
Location: Houston, TX
Posts: 629
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Quote:
![]() I just wanted a way to pump out the bait tank at the end of the day. This could work as a bilge pump, but it wouldn't be practical with most kayak designs. ![]() With a slightly longer intake hose you could reach the rear hatch on an X-Factor or an eXtreme. You would need a rediculously long intake or a removable pump/power supply to reach the center hatch on most other kayaks. I toyed with the idea of installing a bilge pump for a while. In theory, it makes a lot of sense to have one. There are, however, some practical issues that make it difficult. I noticed that my Kayatank fills about 3/4 full as soon as I sit on my kayak. That water comes through the intake pump. That could happen in reverse with a bilge pump. Water could enter through your overboard discharge fitting and backflow through the pump, flooding the kayak. You need a good stop-check valve or a discharge plug to prevent this from happening. Even I have my limits for added weight and complexity. I just carry a trusty hand pump.
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Douglas Gaxiola |
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