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Showing content with the highest reputation on 10/01/19 in all areas

  1. This post cannot be displayed because it is in a forum which requires at least 10 posts to view.
  2. An unusual journey today. We were travelling from Shipley to Apperley Bridge and arrived at Field Locks - a three-rise staircase, for those who don't know them - to find three CRT bods in the middle of trying to sort a problem. They'd figured out that a large bit of timber, or similar, must have got stuck right through the paddle in one of the top lock's bottom gates (= middle lock's top gates), meaning an extra-leaky paddle and a gate that was difficult to fully open. So I invite one of them aboard to have a go from our back deck as we go through from the top to the middle lock - nope, water too deep, can't get at the problem properly. So I suggest backing up into the top lock, draining the water, and having him poke about from our front deck. Hence the boat ends up sitting on the bottom while the blockage is successfully removed, then has to be refloated by opening the ground paddles as per the photo, before heading through to the middle lock. Bit of a different experience of going through a set of locks, but it was nice to be able to help (and nice not to be stuck due to an out-of-action lock ourselves, of course).
    3 points
  3. So far this is the only post I have understood in this thread
    3 points
  4. Spillchucker has mangled what I wrote. Problem is I can't work out what I originally meant to write ?
    3 points
  5. wow, you plainly don’t have much experience of body piercing if you think that’s the most disgusting ?
    3 points
  6. This post cannot be displayed because it is in a forum which requires at least 10 posts to view.
  7. This post cannot be displayed because it is in a forum which requires at least 10 posts to view.
  8. It is CO2 that is heavier than air. CO and CO2 get confused a lot, by me too sometimes. As @ditchcrawler says CO is lighter than air and will pool close to the ceiling, which is why the alarm destruction manuals say to put it near there. Jen
    2 points
  9. This post cannot be displayed because it is in a forum which requires at least 10 posts to view.
  10. Found myself at a double lock one day after a very long days boating, drained the lock, opened the gates, closed the lock, filled the lock up, thought to myself something doesn't seem right here and the it clicked I had forgot to put the boat in.
    2 points
  11. Peaceful? Fairly dead i would have thought.?
    2 points
  12. Perhaps we should call it the David Bowie sensor...
    2 points
  13. This post cannot be displayed because it is in a forum which requires at least 10 posts to view.
  14. This post cannot be displayed because it is in a forum which requires at least 10 posts to view.
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  16. The plan is to use the voltage to "nudge" the SOC: most of the tracking of changes will be done integrating the current, but if the voltage is consistently giving a lower or higher answer, the SOC can be trimmed up or down as needed. I think I need to get the real batteries in place and record a few complete discharge cycles first, to see if I'm generating data which has useful information in it. There's plenty of storage in the computer to log stuff. One problem I may have with coulomb counting is that I'm using a hall-effect current sensor, not a shunt. It's pretty accurate, but can suffer a small persistent offset due to induced magnetism after large current excursions. The spec says this is 300mA max (in plus/minus 200A) but it does represent some drift. Time will tell. 480Ah bank is arriving tomorrow! MP.
    2 points
  17. Dunno if it's true, but I heard that many years ago, a radio programme had an interview with a Romany family, about their way of life. They told the mother that as the Romany custom of cooking hedgehog by the ball of clay method was a well-known thing, they couldn't really avoid asking her about it, but they wouldn't ask her anything about catching or killing the hedgehog, or the actual cooking, to avoid lots of complaints from animal lovers. Ands she wasn't to talk about these aspects in her answers. The interview went on something like this: "I'm sure a lot of our listeners will have heard stories about Romany people eating hedgehogs. Is it true?" "Oh, yes, quite true." "Have you ever eaten hedgehog meat?" "I have, yes, but not for many years now. It's something that goes back to the Old Days. It's not done as often as it used to be." "What does it taste like?" "Difficult to say. It's a bit like cat." The switchboard went into meltdown.
    2 points
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  19. https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/av/uk-scotland-46829940/maid-of-the-loch-slips-back-into-water
    1 point
  20. This post cannot be displayed because it is in a forum which requires at least 10 posts to view.
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  22. This post cannot be displayed because it is in a forum which requires at least 10 posts to view.
  23. So is doing 31 mph in a 30 zone but i bet you do that. If someone is taking a bike to a boat and they ride it slow or have it in gear and walk alongside then what is the big deal. People blasting along is one thing but someone being careful is not a first world problem. I would rather hear a motorcycle coming slowly than an idiot on a bicycle doing 20 mph in silence.
    1 point
  24. It helps if the fuel is not perfectly dry when fed onto the fire is to twice a week get the stove roaring really tremendousely hot for half an hour which should burn off most of the gunge and soot in the flue. I believe Morso recomend this performance.
    1 point
  25. Looks nice but may still need PP: https://media.onthemarket.com/properties/1814845/doc_0_0.pdf
    1 point
  26. I had a hunch it might be something like that, hence my post leaning away from the flue hat. Presumably you'd had that set up for a while so if something changes......prolly summat else, ??
    1 point
  27. CO being heavier than air will move downhill and begin to collect at the lowest point.
    1 point
  28. Thank you everyone for replying, and thanks for your advice. Here's the culprit, it's a fatburg clinkerburg of tar and creosote (I think). Goes to show how this stuff builds up, to only having an inch or two diameter hole for the smoke to escape. The chimney was cleaned before we lit the fire last autumn. Since then we've burnt 13 x 25kg bags of Excel, and 12 x 20kg bags of New Heat. That's 565kg of coal burnt since September. It was probably November when the fire was kept in for 24 hours We've been burning New Heat (was told this will replace Excel???), it's good, but it's chemically. Fire was left to go out last night (glad the weather had warmed up). Today we got the bottlebrush out rattled a length of chain down the flue. Note to self: Clean the chimney more often. Note to everyone: Don't ignore an alarm.
    1 point
  29. The other ways of providing 2.5 minutes fire protection for filters in an engine space include: Some manufacturers offer clear bowls that are intrinsically fire resistant for 2.5 minutes, they may be marked as meeting ISO 10088, or provide documents stating the same. Some manufacturers offer OEM steel 'dog bowl' flame shields that attach underneath the filter. The makers have had these independently tested to certify that they meet ISO 10088 standards. Fuel filter with a "Dog Bowl Fire Shield"
    1 point
  30. I believe so. I noticed a huge number of greenhouses on the opposite bank. A missed opportunity for scrumping!
    1 point
  31. I nearly fell off the back of the boat when the crane went overhead. ? Apparently locals used to complain about a strong smell of cannabis so the sighting of an overhead terrapin may be a possibility..
    1 point
  32. This is what my BSS examiner has said in a text: "Hi Mike. Glass bowls are not allowed under the BSS as they are not classed as fire resistant. Hope this helps."
    1 point
  33. Still breaking the law though isn't it ?
    1 point
  34. Are suggestions for alternative, non-rubbish lpg ovens acceptable? An electric one would be costly to run from a generator, both for petrol and generator wear. Also need to finish cooking by 8pm. Jen
    1 point
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  36. This post cannot be displayed because it is in a forum which requires at least 10 posts to view.
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  38. I think we are of a similar age and I find it happening to me more often. IIRC they are called "senior moments" ?
    1 point
  39. This post cannot be displayed because it is in a forum which requires at least 10 posts to view.
  40. This post cannot be displayed because it is in a forum which requires at least 10 posts to view.
  41. Said several times already. Most recently in post #55. If you didn’t have half the site on ignore you’d know this.
    1 point
  42. Next to top lock at Glascote http://www.nortoncanesboatbuilders.co.uk/home/index.php/boats-for-sale Tim
    1 point
  43. The Gorton could be a good boat depends on the price. Its an early one, #1 Tug. Gary did build a sound boat, mine is Trad #9 and solid. Much easier to get a bike onto a tug deck.
    1 point
  44. Welcome...………………….. If you literally mean "accessed from the boat as you cruise" sadly this isn't going to work well - these days most brokers are not like car showrooms they tend to sell boats from their moorings or from a base - there are very few where you will be able to hop off your boat and look and more particularly where you will be able to view more than one or two a day without detailed appointments. My advice is DONT spoil your holiday but allow for a couple of days either side with a hire car particularly to view the "Braunston triangle" taking in ABNB/Whilton/Rugby/Tollhouse/Weltonfield/Braunston all of whom are in close proximity. We ALL started somewhere where you just want to look and gain ideas from touching and feeling actual boats and our internet based world doesn't help that - IMHO if you are completely new a day spent in the triangle is the only way to start ....................Whilton has a great café as does Braunston (just down the road) Have fun
    1 point
  45. I don't have a "big" steel narrowboat, just a 23 feet GRP (fibreglass) cruiser, and I don't live on it. But I bought it within the last 3 months, and it was my first boat. So I was in the same boat (if you'll pardon the expression) as you. The main problems I had to overcome before being able to go to my boat and step aboard whenever I liked, were to do with finding a boat, buying it, and tying it up where I wanted it to be: 1 - I didn't know anything about boats - just always wanted one, though not to live on. So before taking the plunge, I joined this forum (and another one for the make of GRP boat I had decided on getting) and spent a very long time reading through previous posts. I read everything. This taught me a lot about what I was letting myself in for - costs, pitfalls, legal requirements and so on and on and on. I learned a lot. I think this was the most important preparation for boat ownership that I made. 2 - I didn't have anywhere to keep a boat. This is something you need to think about before you buy. Where is it going to live? Can your hoped-for mooring-place accommodate you? What will you do if it can't? In my case, there were two marinas relatively close to my home, one 35 minutes from home by car, and one 45 minutes away. Both could fit me in. I went for the least costly one, which happened to be the nearest one. 3 - When you find you ideal boat, where is it? My ideal purchase happened to be 55 miles by road from where I wanted to keep it, or 65 miles and 104 locks by canal, which would take me between 5 and 6 days. As a beginner, I didn't fancy doing 5 or 6 days, single-handed, on an unfamiliar boat. It cost me several hundred pounds to have the boat craned out of the canal at one end, moved the 55 miles by road and craned back in again at the other end. Hope this helps.
    1 point
  46. No probs Bob I will have a look for it tomorrow if thats ok?
    1 point
  47. This post cannot be displayed because it is in a forum which requires at least 10 posts to view.
  48. I don't think you do it with live ones, if only because they would break the clay ...
    1 point
  49. Lol ? ? ? ? ? that’s unfair, instead of jumping in, I do read, and I do ask the forum for advice. i like the job to be done correctly, i keep asking questions, I’m on the forum because I want it right and safe. And I’ve had qualified people work on boats in the past, who hasn’t done a proper professional job. yes I haven’t got a lot of confidence in my self, and I do keep asking. I want to get it right. in the past I’ve had worked checked, and has been approved. if by asking the forum I’m upsetting folks let me know, and I won’t ask no more. i just like to add, the wiring was done correctly, it was my mistake getting the sketch wrong. yes I made a mistake on the 12v but with the forums knowledge I will get it fixed. everything I do I want it right. col
    1 point
  50. But he won't be able to see your post Dr Bob... Don't worry, I'll pass it on...oh.....no...won't see that either. ?
    1 point
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