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Showing content with the highest reputation on 17/07/21 in all areas

  1. This post cannot be displayed because it is in a forum which requires at least 10 posts to view.
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  3. If they did,I reckon I know the two women...πŸ™„
    3 points
  4. Wincham is straddle crane, very easy and Tom is very obliging. Middlewich dry dock is not available for any use other than the hire fleet owner. I would take the plunge, offer a little less and buy it whilst you can.But then I don't like surveys, there are so many get out clauses that they tend to be almost worthless.
    3 points
  5. Alan, I agree as the more I read the more I think it’s best I do not take on the task of re wiring the boat.
    2 points
  6. This post cannot be displayed because it is in a forum which requires at least 10 posts to view.
  7. I'd say that's not a very good idea. Unless the boat has a very thick baseplate then the builder would have the dubious proposition of sitting ballast on top of the sprayfoam. Additionally, any plumbing leaks which are bound to happen over the years and would normally drain to the stern of the cabin where the water can be removed via an inspection hatch, would instead soak into the sprayfoam (which is comprised of both closed and open cells) or get underneath it and there would be no way of getting it out. Just get the ballast laid on old cables or plastic spacers and if you want floor insulation it would need to go under the floorboards.
    2 points
  8. This post cannot be displayed because it is in a forum which requires at least 10 posts to view.
  9. On this day in 2012. The Leek Branch and Leek Tunnel. Hazlehurst Junction, leaving the Leek Branch. Stockton Brook top lock.
    2 points
  10. This post cannot be displayed because it is in a forum which requires at least 10 posts to view.
  11. Where did you check the battery voltage ? (at the batteries or at the fridge ?) I bet if you check the voltage going into the fridge you'll find it probably 1v less than at the battery. You obviously have a volt drop problem which is shown by the fact that you are dragging the battery down with the inverter so that by the time the reduced voltage gets to the fridge it is below what the fridge will accept. Start the engine and you'll be getting 14+ volts at the battery, and probably ~13v at the fridge, the fridge will run perfectly with or without the inverter on. The fact you have been living in the marina with the batteries permanently on charge has masked the problem that your fridge is wired in with the wrong cable. I had exactly the same problem - the answer is to re-wire the fridge supply using the correct sized cable - this will dpend on the distance of the fridge from the battery and should be measured taking into account out & return (so twice the distance) Your manual will tell you what size cable to use, mine shows : For example if the fridge is 7mts from the battery the distance out & return is 14mts, 14 metres require cable size A MINIMUM of 10mm2
    2 points
  12. Just to clarify. The picture is not of one of their narrowboats. All pram hoods automatically self lower when they detect a bridge. πŸ˜€
    2 points
  13. Have to say I've never understood that either. Is it one of those things thats repeated so often it become fact ? I'm not a good welder but I've welded or attempted to weld various things on boats tractors and cars and never disconnected batteries or alternators and as far as I know its never caused an issue...
    1 point
  14. Probably the only way we will get around on CRT waterways in a couple of years. Grounded, switch the Capper on.....sorted.
    1 point
  15. This post cannot be displayed because it is in a forum which requires at least 10 posts to view.
  16. I think that the batteries are goosed. 12.64v after a 7 hour run suggests not fully charged by a long way or duff batteries. You will always get some volt drop to a fridge, the starting current is quite high and if the battery voltage is not optimal it won't kick in.
    1 point
  17. I don't like it and I don't understand the thoughts behind going to the trouble of constructing an expensive boat on the basis of a historic/traditional canal boat and then just getting it all wrong. You don't even have to look carefully to see it's not even a nod to history. It's a caricature, and like all cartoons relies on exaggerated features Like Spitting Image does. The front end is ugly and impractical The fore cabin again is ugly, too tall, and would get in the way. What purpose does it serve? The main cabin is slab sided, the lack of tumblehome is a short cut. The hull to cabin proportions just hurt the eye. I could continue, but would only be listing the reasons why I wouldn't want it. Seeing as I would never buy it and I can't imagine anyone else wanting to know my opinions I'll shut up.
    1 point
  18. This post cannot be displayed because it is in a forum which requires at least 10 posts to view.
  19. Total brain fade. My apologies.
    1 point
  20. He can choose when to watch rubbish now.
    1 point
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  23. This post cannot be displayed because it is in a forum which requires at least 10 posts to view.
  24. This post cannot be displayed because it is in a forum which requires at least 10 posts to view.
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  26. My wife gets sparkling wine from our fridge! πŸ˜‚πŸ€£
    1 point
  27. The problem is that interfaces between different materials (e.g. metals and corrosion) can form diodes -- not very good ones, but still enough to mean the resistance to current flow in the two directions is different, which converts some of the AC current to DC.
    1 point
  28. This post cannot be displayed because it is in a forum which requires at least 10 posts to view.
  29. Dutton dry dock Runcorn dry dock Hesfords slipway ABC (Anderton) floating dry dock Uplands Marina (Anderton) slipway Wincham Wharf crane and (I think) dry dock Middlewich dry dock (in the lock flight) Kings Lock slipway Orchard Marina dry dock is no more.
    1 point
  30. There's not much evidence to support that statement though
    1 point
  31. One of the best things I ever did was to throw out my two TVs at home, about three years ago. Certainly never missed one on the boat. They were a pair of massive Sony CRT things attached to digiboxes that would have probably lasted until the heatdeath of the universe. Took up loads of space for a load of rubbish TV and ads. Friends keep offering me their old but perfectly good tellies, and, although appreciative of the gestures, I do have to explain that I don't miss one or want one at all. That doesn't mean I don't watch stuff at home or on the boats. Certainly able to keep up with breaking news and enjoyed Euro 2020 on the laptop through a mobile hotspot. There is a huge amount of interesting stuff on YouTube, which is where I consume most content. There are music concerts from everyone you can imagine, tons of science and history lectures from international authorities, lots of boats and boatbuilding stuff (been watching a guy in Bulgaria building Proas recently), then and now I'll even dip into a few episodes of Poirot, olds news panel quizzes like Mock the week or stand up comedy (copyright, cough!) but also stuff like RHLSTP where Richard Herring has a guest on for a chat of a comedy bent or Lex Fridman's far more serious, science type interviews. I grew up being asked "Why don't you just turn off the TV set and do something more interesting instead?" Took me decades to act but glad I did.
    1 point
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  33. 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 agree it sounds like low voltage but I don't think ding Alan's test will give you a different voltage. It is the motor starting surge that pulls the voltage down for a few microseconds, and that is over so quickly a typical voltmeter will not sample fast enough to read it reliably. Its over too fast. First check the cable size. Most manufacturers recommend 1sq mm CCSA for each meter between fridge and battery, using the same size for both pos and neg. Never skimp on electric fridge cable size. Also check for bad connections and faulty switches and fuses/circuit breakers on the fridge circuit, including the domestic master switch. Especially if it has a removable plastic key. Try putting both master switch cables on one terminal as a temporary test.
    1 point
  39. This post cannot be displayed because it is in a forum which requires at least 10 posts to view.
  40. What is on the label on the existing battery?
    1 point
  41. This post cannot be displayed because it is in a forum which requires at least 10 posts to view.
  42. Surprises me as well, he is quick to criticise my use of a word in another thread but seems to lack a general level of knowledge of many subjects.
    1 point
  43. This post cannot be displayed because it is in a forum which requires at least 10 posts to view.
  44. Thank you for all the helpful advice. My stay in Liverpool was excellent. The trip through the docks was spectacular, our mooring couldn't have been better, and Liverpool has a real buzz to it. Just strolling around, people watching and visiting the touristy sites put a permanent smile on my face. I don't think, in the previous posts, anyone mentioned Mathew St. That's a place no one should miss. We were there the weekend of the Euro final so perhaps the city was a bit livelier than normal. Queues waiting to get into bars at 5 o clock was quite common. Yes, Liverpool should be on everyone's "must visit" list. The only downside was the amount of weed we encountered getting there. From bridge 17 southwards the going was heavy and slow. The end result made it bearable however.
    1 point
  45. OK, I said I wasn't going to do anything more to this thing and excepting repairs, that was it, but I couldn't resist. πŸ˜€ The usual failure mode of the Sureflow and Jabsco water pumps commonly fitted is to start leaking from the pump body. When this happens upstream of the pressure sensor it can continue to leak for a long time as you are not clued in by the pump cycling every so often as the water system depressurises. I've ended up having to pump a lot of water out of the cabin bilge as a result in the past. Someone gave me a couple of very simple water sensors, suitable for Arduino and other PLC's. They are interlaced combs of exposed circuit board tracks, across which a voltage is placed. Any water on the circuit board and the resistance across the combs decreases. The more water, the lower the resistance. They are available for a few pounds. Example. Since it was free and there were still a few unused I/O pins on the Arduino that controls my combined solar controller, calorifier temperature gauge and water tank level gauge, I thought, why not! The sensor was mounted on to an old baking tray, which will sit under the pump, with a bit of Kingspan/Celotex type extruded insulation to damp any vibration. There are three pins on the sensor, 5V power, ground and signal. You don't want to power this thing up continuously as this risks electrochemical corrosion of the circuit board tracks, like a boat on a shore line without a galvanic isolator, or similar. To do this, the 5V in line is powered by a digital output pin, that is energised only when taking a measurement. After testing it with a shorter time of one minute between measurements, I've programmed it to energise for 10ms once an hour. Experiments with measuring the sensor pin values while dipping the sensor in an egg cup of water suggested that 200 out of 1023 as a suitable threshold for the analogue read. I'm not going to put the whole sketch here. If anyone wants to see it, PM me. The LED's on the display show cauliflower temperature for 6 seconds and water gauge level for 3 seconds with a half second gap between each every ten seconds. If a leak from the pump is detected, then during the water gauge 3s display, all four level LED's will light up. This will carry on happening for an hour until the next 10ms measurement. If it is still wet, then it will carry on doing this until hopefully someone notices! All the LED's lighting is a warning. There is a similar thing for the cauliflower being over temperature during the 6s part of the display sequence. There is no real need to have made this. I could just as easily look in the water tank cupboard and see if it is wet! Jen The sensor mounted to the baking tray. Ready for the water pump to sit inside. I should probably drill an overflow hole in the tray near the top to prevent the components at the top of the sensor getting wet.
    1 point
  46. This post cannot be displayed because it is in a forum which requires at least 10 posts to view.
  47. This post cannot be displayed because it is in a forum which requires at least 10 posts to view.
  48. My deck-wash pump is supplied by being connected to a hull fitting and draws water directly from the Canal / River / Sea, It has simple 'click-in' connectors for the piping so I have made a roving hose pipe that can quickly replace the pump water supply and the end of the hose simply put into the relevant bilge area. The water is then directed overboard, It will suck-down to almost 'nothing' as the boat tends to have a bit of a slope one way or the other in each bilge, simply put the hose into the lowest corner and it gets it to almost dry. A wipe around with some 'Plenty' and its done.
    1 point
  49. You are only borrowing it as most if not all ends up back in the canal.
    1 point
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