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Showing content with the highest reputation on 01/30/23 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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  5. That'll be because the Baton Twirlers have told them that if they are on the Llangollen they can claim their £400 heating grant.
    3 points
  6. Looking at you tube everyone is on the Llangollen.
    3 points
  7. This post cannot be displayed because it is in a forum which requires at least 10 posts to view.
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  9. It's not so much of having enough power to go, you also need enough power to stop, Those aircooled ebay specials are v noisy, old seagulls are quite polluting but you can get biodegradable two stroke oil, I suspect that a lot of the suggestions on here are maybe more than the OP was hoping to pay
    2 points
  10. I wouldn't count on either gaining independence or joining the EU 🙂
    2 points
  11. Plenty of boats through at the weekend now the ice has melted. Think the main obstacle to it being used at the moment is hire boats moored on lock landings. Kudos to the owner of the unoccupied hire boat in Willow Wren livery for deciding that blocking the lower lock landing wasn't obstructive enough and putting in the effort recently to move it to the lock landing above, so that (with help from an ABC boat) it prevents use of the landing for the (open) services as well as the lock. Maybe the old training company's been replaced by someone running a How Not To Operate a Narrowboat course...
    2 points
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  14. We bought our narrowboat for £90000 in 2007, sold it through Rugby Boat Sales in 2020 for £80000 and it's just been sold again for £87500. I was very surprised and happy with our £80k and think RBS commission well deserved.
    2 points
  15. Thank you everyone for your replies. I was considering solar as an option. I've got a couple of small panels and control units from a previous project, but there's not enough sunlight at the moment to test everything fully. Another battery would be cheaper than an outboard, but as BilgePump says, there is not a lot of surface area, plus I just can't shake the idea of having a more traditional back up. I'll keep investigating this avenue though. Attached are pictures of the diesel engine, a Penta MD1. Knackered, in this context, means well beyond my skill to repair and un-economical to pay someone else to do it. I have no idea how much it would cost to get a boat yard to haul the engine out, get it up and running, and put it back in again, but I suspect it would be more than I paid for the boat. Same with having it removed and replaced. I wonder how much I would get for it as scrap? From a manoeuvrability POV, the electric motor has reverse, so as long as I didn't completely flatten the battery I could use the petrol engine for the long straights, then the electric for docking. Going through my photo's I have discovered that the outboard bracket is a Seagull. Maybe a clue as to what engine was used in the past.
    2 points
  16. This post cannot be displayed because it is in a forum which requires at least 10 posts to view.
  17. Yes - they were the only ones answering the AD and they bought it, ( a couple of days before Christmas) no survey, paid cash, climbed aboard and headed for London. Apparently starter battery failed near Northampton but apart from that arrived safely and enjoyed the liveaboard lfe, (It was only 30 foot !) I accept it was just 'luck' that someone was looking at the for sale ads just when I posted it, and, that it met their budget and requirements. I don't know how long the for sale ads stop on the forum - maybe it is still in the archives ?
    2 points
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  19. One approach would be to elevate the solar panel on stands like a gazebo and use it as shade/rain cover for the cockpit. This would depend on beam at the stern end but you could probably put a 365w panel or something up there if done right. Watch the bridges if used on the cut though. Cross posted with booke23. Great minds like a think.
    2 points
  20. Where there is a will there is a way! It would be a squeeze without elevating the panels like the above example. But I think you could just get 2 x 75W panels on each side of the roof plus a 50W transom mounted panel. Hard to know exactly without seeing it though. There is a guy with a grp day boat moored near me and he has what looks like a 200w panel mounted on the transom (don't think you could get a panel this size on the OP's transom) and an electric outboard. He goes for trips up and down the canal on summer evenings. His mooring has no electricity so the panel provides the power to charge his batteries.
    2 points
  21. Do members get a discount ?
    2 points
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  25. A lot of retro installs use a separate diesel tank fitted in the well deck so gravity feed is achieved. This would be IMO the best way to go. Not the best idea to use the same fuel tank for engine and diesel stove.
    2 points
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  28. That is all my insurance covers if I snuff it overseas, not to bring the body home
    1 point
  29. We applied for, and were granted, the historic discount for Oates last year. As an iceboat it originally had no cabin - it now has a brand new steel cabin and a tug deck. Points which they were interested in: We absolutely had to have a National Historic Ships registration. We had to provide a decent history file (fortunately I already had more documentation on the boat than anyone else, dating back to the 1970s, including letters to the then owner from BWB confirming its history!) They wanted to confirm that the wooden cabin which was removed was not itself historic (it wasn't as it was not early enough to qualify as historic in its own right and had been replaced in its entirety at at least one point, documented by photographs). I felt it was a pragmatic assessment. The historic point of interest was always the hull which is largely as built, although it did have a counter conversion in the 1970s. There were no concerns from the registering officer. To the OP - it might be worth reviewing who you are insured with. We are required to have a survey every 5yrs and pay a relatively normal insurance premium. There do not appear to be any more restrictions/requirements/costs placed on our 150yr old boat than would be applied to a 25yr old boat. By staying with the same company they even accepted the previous owner's survey which was less than a year old at the time, rather than requiring us to have a new one. The discount is 10%. Alec
    1 point
  30. Would new paddle gear be of any interest? I ask because one of those near-impossible coincidences happened today. I was chatting with a customer and conversation turned to canals and boats. He said his company does quite a lot of work for CRT, making paddle gear for them. Yes, really!!!! So if you'd like his phone number PM me. He said it was fine for me to pass it on to you if you're interested, and he'll make up some gear for your garden lock.
    1 point
  31. Knowing the problems we had, I'd strongly suggest you have a look at Newark (there are 3 marinas in Newark) or somewhere like Goole or even Hull. Are you planning to just scoot up and down the Trent or are you planning on 'doing' the Humber and a bit of coastal ? Edit to add : The lock from the Foss-ditch onto the Trent is Tidal so you can only access (or leave) the Trent when there is sufficient water in the river.
    1 point
  32. If you claim it on the form, I wonder if CRT carry out any checks to see if the boat qualifies?
    1 point
  33. WD40 is not an oil, let alone a penetrating oil, and will do nothing. The Name 'WD 40' comes from the fact it is a 'water dispersant' and is the 40th blend they came up with. It is designed to be sprayed into (say) electrical junction boxes that have had water ingress and effectively 'dries out' the box. Buy a can of proper penetrating oil and see if that works.
    1 point
  34. Our new cards arrived today
    1 point
  35. On this day in 2022 River Cam, downstream from Clayhithe Bridge leftbank: The Bridge beer garden rightbank: the Cam Conservators' quay Picture by © JohnSutton
    1 point
  36. If I were you I would concentrate on getting the inboard engine working, or at least getting a better idea of what is wrong with it and how much it will cost to put right. If you do end up getting a petrol outboard, the disadvantage of a 2 stroke is that they don't like running at low speed or idle so buy one that is small enough to run at a reasonable speed without making the boat go too fast.
    1 point
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  38. This post cannot be displayed because it is in a forum which requires at least 10 posts to view.
  39. Definitely. I have a 60 litre tank in the port well deck locker feeding my Kabola oil drip stove. It allows me to use kerosene in the stove. This can be filled from a dedicated filler on the top of the tank, or in an emergency from the engine's diesel tank at the stern via a built in transfer pump. Using the transfer pump its a 2 person job, as the button for the transfer pump in on the engine control panel at the stern, making it impossible for one person to see when the tank is approaching full. A cut off switch at say 90% capacity would have been useful.
    1 point
  40. This post cannot be displayed because it is in a forum which requires at least 10 posts to view.
  41. Ignore the prices this was the info from 2 years ago... Epidac 116 Black - £49.27 per 5L composite pack (4L base + 1L activator) - this is the product to go over Comastic. Any areas of bare metal with the comastic would ideally be spot primed with our Epidac 115 Aluminium which is £52.34 per 5L composite pack. This gives the anti-corrosion protection to bare steel
    1 point
  42. This post cannot be displayed because it is in a forum which requires at least 10 posts to view.
  43. This post cannot be displayed because it is in a forum which requires at least 10 posts to view.
  44. Thames and Medway Canal is in Kent. The canal basin in Gravesend is still just about navigable, and there are few miles still in water between there and Higham
    1 point
  45. Fazeley Mill is not looking very full at the moment, I would have thought they had room. Just put their prices up though, £50 per foot per year. So they will probably be even less full soon! If it's an old working boat, Alvecote might be a better bet. They like that sort of thing!
    1 point
  46. I think it is an important point that one should never be tempted to engage in political discussions in the Republic- it is such a hugely complicated issue, and has been causing not just friction, but deep hatred and hundreds of savage murders- for many decades. My only feelings about it are based on instinct and personal opinion, as I don't know enough of the history or the suffering. Over the centuries our history with Ireland has been a typical example of a more economically powerful and heavily populated country trying to gain advantage over a less populated neighbour. That was what they did back then. But times have thankfully moved on, and looking back with our modern perspective, we can see the clear injustices and offences that were committed. Although we as today's UK citizens are not responsible for the offences of our earlier governments or their military, we cant expect an Irish person whose great-grandfather was killed by a British soldier to just forget about that part of their family history. At certain times, the historical feelings of resentment against an oppressor will come out. I don't have an answer for it, although I can understand that occasional resurgence of historical anger towards English visitors to the Republic. All I can say is thank God for the Good Friday Agreement, but it will take many, many decades to heal those wounds, those memories, and that anger. For balance, I have to add that my viewpoint is coloured by the fact that I see myself as being a Scouse European, rather than English. And even more so now than I did back in the dreadful 1980s.
    1 point
  47. It sounded like the fire was going to be in the front of the boat and the tank at the back so possibly there will be a water tank effect. Indeed some (not all) boats do tend to be slightly higher at the bows at all states of trim for aesthetic reasons.
    1 point
  48. Find "a man who can" Get deck chair out Sit in deck chair Get beer out and drink Watch man work Get wallet out Pay man Go cruising
    1 point
  49. We cannot live our lives worrying about wether we sold or are selling too cheap/at wrong time/hang on till things book up, etc etc etc. We have one short life, wasting any of it trying to always come out financialy " On Top " is a fools errand, just get on and enjoy as it all ends too soon.
    1 point
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