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Hartlebury lad

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Posts posted by Hartlebury lad

  1. Some good posts in general on all this.

    Certainly, on boat design, my long standing boat engineer friend used to do RCR emergency callouts a long time ago. He stopped.. He said that all boatbuilders should do a few shifts on callouts before ever starting to build a boat.

    • Love 1
  2. 1 minute ago, blackrose said:

    If it's a conventional integral tank at the bow you're likely to see a hatch in the well deck for you to get into the tank to clean and repaint it. No hatch and you're likely to have a stainless tank although some do have access for cleaning.

    Cheers, that confirms it. I only had a minor doubt at one point because its a decent enough belt and braces boat, but important aspects such as swim tanks being undersized,  and no rear deck hatch to access the weed hatch and stern greaser were two idiosyncrasies that immediately needed attention - especially after breaking a rib early days lying across a hot engine to access the weed hatch!

  3. 21 minutes ago, PD1964 said:

     I think you may have something there. There seams to be more bacteria and intolerance’s today then back in the 60’s 70’s Just look at all those pale skinny young vegetarian/vegan boat owners, who are Glutan, Wheat, Carbohydrate intolerant it must cost them a fortune in yakult and Actimal probiotic drinks. They could of saved so much money and be more healthier if they just cut the mold off their cheese as a kid, or toasted their bread with the blue patches.

    You’ve had the boat 8 years and you don’t know what kind of water tank you have? I would expect that question of a week Newbie, not an 8 year boat owner. Unbelievable.

    I always assumed it was stainless steel, it looked like stainless steel inside and i only queried it because i saw some tiny rust like deposits inside. I also only queried the actual definition of an integral tank, excluding all other types of tank. There are one or two "unorthodox" discrepancies on the build of the boat - ask anyone who has owned one of these . 

    Just because i want to be absolutely certain of an important aspect of my boat and boating experience ( or at least important to me ) should not justify your attempt to ridicule me.......

    • Greenie 1
  4. 3 minutes ago, mrsmelly said:

    We lived aboard for over thirty years. Always drank straight from the tank. Different boats with different tanks, some integral, some stainless steel. Never had a problem. The missus kept one of those britta filter jugs for her tea though. I did fit a fancy expensive ceramic filter on my new boat but I have since realised it was overkill.

    More weight to the argument then. Help me out, whats the definition of an integral tank, as opposed to an ss tank? Our tank i assumed was ss - i cant see it under the welldeck, the filler is next to the bow doors. When it was nearly empty i peered down the hole with a powerful torch, and spotted few very small rust spots surrounded by clean looking metal. 

  5. Responding again, i probably am over cautious. I am sure i heard recently that some water authorities were lowering the standards of water treatment as our drinking water was if anything over treated! 

    Milton the tank then, flush out twice  ( poor water pump!) and maybe a filter jug in the fridge for those balmy summer days! 

    As an aside, i am sure i read on a Milton or similar product bottle" not to be used for metal containers"?

  6. Agreed, David,  But at home, its freshly drawn daily from the mains. On the boat, it is held in a holding tank, often for several weeks without replenishment, with a (albeit tiny) cocktail of microbes going back to 1996! 

  7. Hi, i have just found this thread, we have been boating (non cc) for 8 years now, on a 1996 Evans and Son boat. I think the tank is SS, and have always been reluctant to drink water directly from the tank - we take on board separate cold drinking water and top up a dispenser in the galley. 

    I am at the point where in this day and age, its daft and impractical to be surrounded by loads of 5L containers of water. Its more of a bacteria thing for me.

    Maybe an inline filter below the kitchen sink? Or am i over cautious?

  8. As an aside, the horn was one of a twin horn set off a Vauxhall Astra GT thingy - I installed them years ago and thought they would be the business, but when i pushed the switch, they barely flickered. I took one off and all was fine.

    Of course, i forgot to do it whilst the engine was running, which is when you need the horn anyway! No doubt, they would have worked fine under those circumstances.

     

  9. Water pump is a common or garden  Shurflo ( i know ....!)

    Bathroom pump out is a Whale Gulper

    The 8 cabin lights are all LED, as is the single bathroom Light.

    The toilet pump is a Thetford C200? and 3 rear lights are LED

    Horn is a standard 12v car horn (long cable run), as is the front spot.

    C Heating pump is a tiny Chinese Import jobbie, fed by the calorifier. 

     

     

     

  10. Thanks again everyone.

    Those slabs have been on for about a minimum of 12 years, including when the stove was seriously overloaded and fired up in error ( inexperience back then!)

    However,  i am not convinced replacing them is an easy option, especially to comply meticulously with the latest BSS standards, which may involve moving the stove and flue a few mm forward.

    I think given the possible hornets nest this could open, i may go with Sir Percys idea!

  11. 40 minutes ago, Alan de Enfield said:

     

    There is a similar red wire on T5 - they are both on crocodile clips so I am guessing (assuming ?) they are something like an incorrectly wired and connected battery charger.

     

     

     

     

    I recently got £10 each (collected) for my 110ah batteries and £25 each (collected) for my 230Ah batteries,

     

     

    The other two wires are from a small folding solar panel kept on the roof - are you suggesting they are incorrectly connected? I have been using it for about 5 years! Not brilliant,

    but every bit helps!

  12. Afternoon all....

     

    My ten (yes ten) year old batteries are long overdue to be replaced (4 x 110ah Platinums) - non liveaboard. 

     

    My rigid daily routine of being power conservation obsessed is now a bit of a chore. They read 12.1/12.2 each morning, but deplete quickly down near that value after a full days cruising within an hour or two (fridge on, all led boat) I have been threatening to change them for a few years! Getting four to fit the battery bay is more important than changing the spec. 

     

    What's the disconnection and reconnection routine for this set up. I have numbered the terminals on the pic. the main switch panel is on the left, out of shot.

    screenshot.png

  13. 8 hours ago, philjw said:

    Cheers. Lot of aggro though to do that though. Could be one of those jobs one may regret starting! May try Caldwell's as Pie Eater suggests.

  14. On 01/02/2021 at 12:21, ditchcrawler said:

    A couple of years ago I had my boat done like this at Northwich Dry Dock. I was very much in 2 minds about it and still am. I will let you know how well it worked when its next docked. I don't think standard blacking works that well regardless of how well its applied so whether this will be any better I will tell you next time its done.

    http://www.northwichdrydock.com/services/hull-blacking-service/

     

    I am considering having my boat 2 packed there. They seem really helpful there. The word is they have the mother of all pressure washers instead of a back to metal approach. If the pressure doesn't take off the bitumen remaining bitumen can take 2 pack? Bare metal and bitumen combination. Less mess and cost? 

  15. 2 minutes ago, Alan de Enfield said:

    That is not an 'anchor failure', its a failure of the skipper to have a suitable anchor (and anchoring system) on board.

     

    It really frustrates me the number of boats you see with a 10-15kg Danforth anchor, and when you ask them why "its because it folds flat and its easy to store", O' thats all right then, the fact its not suitable for a 15-20 ton boat on a typical river bottom is not relevant.

     

    Well 'tossing an anchor overboard is going to result in failure.

    An anchor needs to be deployed.

    Alan....

    1. At least i said "deployed"

    2. You will note, i did say "fit for purpose"

    3. I suggested it is not an exact science-  perfect anchor set ups don't exist-  and sometimes "shit happens" 

     

    oh, and 

    4. with nearly 30,000 posts on here, you will of course be aware the Anchor/Rope blah de blah debates have raged on and on here many times! Worth a separate thread if you want to rekindle....?

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