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48 Hatteras update

  • Thread starter Thread starter Phasma2128
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Phasma2128

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Jan 9, 2021
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257
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  1. OWNER - I own a Hatteras Yacht
Hatteras Model
48' COCKPIT MY-Series II (1993 - 1996)
Frustrated and venting….I’ve spent $40k this winter on updates and repairs on my new to me 48 Hatteras cpmy. The last thing on the list is an oil leak. I’ve been trying to get my port engine (6v92) oil leak diagnosed and repaired. The lack of diesel mechanics has now put me off until April just to have it looked at by a qualified diesel mechanic. It will be 6-8 weeks before I can get it repaired after that. Yet another summer interrupted. Damn it!

too many boats and not enough mechanics
 
Just had this conversation with my marina manager re: dd 2 stroke mechs. Getting harder to find a good dd mech as the older ones age out or pass, and there's not many new ones coming in.
 
I think you will find it is just getting harder for any brand to send techs out to the dock this month or even next.
Currently in Ortega (Jax FL), it's 8 weeks for near any dock side service.
Boat washers are 2 -3 weeks out.
Yard service is over 4 weeks out.

DD techs, you may have to wait a lil longer. Get your name in there and credit card ready.

Of course there is the new boater that can always find some help quicker. Yes, They learn the hard way who to call next time and wait for them.
 
This isn't just detroit diesel, it's across the board. Diesel mechanics as a group are mostly in their 50's-70's and more are retiring by the day. As an example of what's happening right now, Lamb's where I dock had an old-school guy who an inframe rebuild was a few days' inconvenience for. He was top notch. He retired after them repeatedly begging him not to. The guy they had been training for years and had sent to all the manufacturer's certification schools got an offer for more money somewhere else and bailed. Now they have no mechanic, they just give you a list of outside people you can call until they figure the situation out or something changes.

Sadler point is maybe a thousand feet down the river, same thing happened to them. Brooks spent years and the better part of $100k training his mechanic's replacement, and after getting all the training the guy bailed and moved out of state for a higher offer that he would have matched, but the guy just left and he never had the chance. It's so competitive that it's impossible to keep help no matter what you do. During COVID basically half the country bought a boat, demand has exploded.

The bigger issue is the vicious cycle. For an entire generation from the 1980's and 1990's it wasn't societally "acceptable" to go to a trade school. I was born in 1981, I went to college and grad school and so did all my friends. My parents would have shot me if I said otherwise. There is a very large hole in the skilled labor pool that isn't quickly filled.

Adding to all of that, like that's all not enough, the supply chain shortages have made it to where half the time it already takes 2 months to get them to come look at it, and once they get there there's nothing they can do but tell you what's wrong with it, because it takes many more months to get the parts.

It's looking like this is all going to get worse before it gets better.
 
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Maybe you have to wait because you call them mechanics? :) they’re supposed to Be technicians nowadays

Kidding obviously... but yes it s getting very difficult unless you have a list of reliable various specialists
 
I was able to get a truck mechanic to the boat. He wouldn't touch the cooling system, but after the oil change and checking injectors, they both run better. Maybe try that. RV's have exploded too, but not the supply of detroits.
 
I was able to get a truck mechanic to the boat. He wouldn't touch the cooling system, but after the oil change and checking injectors, they both run better. Maybe try that. RV's have exploded too, but not the supply of detroits.

That's a really good idea.
 
I was able to get a truck mechanic to the boat. He wouldn't touch the cooling system, but after the oil change and checking injectors, they both run better. Maybe try that. RV's have exploded too, but not the supply of detroits.

After Penski, Truck Detroits and Marine Detroits were quickly two different lines of engines.
Engine HP tunes mostly (injectors, multi turbos, heat exchangers, Counter rotating engines).
Any good tech can work on most. All engines have to have a special touch where some experience does come thru.

Cat racks require special tool sets. Detroit's just the injector timing tool (linear Mic) and feeler gauges.

When a kid shows up and can not find the port for his laptop to plug into, You know you have problems in your shop.
 

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