3 • u, Ection, Sing – Baja Marine 192 Islander User Manual

Page 39

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3.3

192 Islander

®

s

eCtIon

3 • u

sIng

y

our

B

oat

f

illinG

T

he

T

anks

• Check the fill plate label to ensure that fuel is

placed ONLY in the fuel tank. The fuel fill plates

are located on the port side of your boat (Figure

3.2.1).

• Keep nozzle in contact with fuel fill opening at

all times during fueling.

• Listen as tank fills and stop adding fuel before

it spills from the vent. Fuel must have room for

expansion.

a

fTer

f

illinG

• DO nOT wash spilled fuel overboard. Wipe up

any spill with rags or paper towels and dispose

of them properly on shore.

• Open engine compartment and check for fuel

leaks or fumes. This is especially important if

your boat is equipped with gasoline engines.

leave compartment open until no odor is

apparent. Close compartment.

• If fumes in the engine compartment do not

disappear, do not turn on blower or start engine.

get help from trained and experienced persons

before using the boat.

• Turn on blower for four minutes, then restart

engine.

• assist passengers back into the boat.

4. b

oarDinG

• DO nOT overload the boat.

• Board one person at a time and give assistance

as needed.

• Transfer gear and equipment by handing it from

a person on the dock to a person on board. you

Wet decks are slippery.

You can be seriously injured if you slip and fall.

Wear slip-resistant footwear secured to your feet and

hold onto rails or boat structure.

!

WARNING

can lose your balance and be injured if you

attempt to board while carrying equipment or

gear.

• Distribute the weight of equipment and

passengers as evenly as possible to keep the

boat balanced.

• stow gear and equipment so that it is accessible,

but everything is to be stored in places so as to

prevent it from flying about if the boat encounters

rough water or weather.

5. p

ersonal

f

loTaTion

D

evices

(pfD’

s

)

• Operator must instruct all passengers on location

and use of PFD’s (see Section 1- Safety, page

4 for type and usage).

• Children and all non-swimmers, adults as well

as children, must wear properly-sized PFDs at

all times when aboard. Check applicable state

regulations for PFD wear requirements.

• all passengers should wear PFDs. By the

time someone falls overboard, it can be to late

for them to put on a PFD and fasten it properly.

This is especially true in colder waters, below

70

o

F, where survival time, before hypothermia

sets in, is measured in minutes.

• If there are passengers not wearing PFDs,

the PFDs must be readily accessible. “Readily

accessible” means out of the storage bag and

unbuckled.

• All throwable flotation devices (cushions, rings,

etc.) must be right at hand.

6. p

assenGer

i

nsTrucTion

anD

l

ocaTion

• Everyone on board must be told about the boat’s

behavior from starting to getting up on plane.

• Before the operator does any high-speed

maneuvers or rapidly accelerates or decelerates

the boat, passengers must be warned to sit and

hold on and must heed the warning.

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