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Tony Dunkley

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Posts posted by Tony Dunkley

  1. Possibly not long loaded at Newdigate Colliery arm so Suttons would be the first chance to get rid of the coal dust . . . . . . . . .

     

    Or, looking at how the butty's laying and how close the stern-end is to the stop-lock end of the bridge, . . . maybe Longford.

  2.  

    They would be glad of that if true! Last time I saw them in action at Nottingham, they were plagued all the way from the Court to the railway station by one of the awkward brigade with video.

     

    Mr Garner was sufficiently discountenanced that he jumped onto the train with the Shoosmiths lot – even though that was heading in the opposite direction to where he wished to go! If that had been a through train, he was in for a long ride to Milton Keynes and back.

     

     

     

    I doubt it would have been a wasted journey, though, . . . . . more of a welcome, possibly planned, opportunity for Parry to personally congratulate his top enforcer on securing a safer, and better managed and conserved future for the river Trent by freeing it from the menacing presence of Andy Wingfield.

     

    Is there any more news on last week's threatened seizure of the Licensed/PBC'd boat on a private mooring on the Trent?

    Perhaps there are even more rewards in the offing for Garner, after successfully intimidating someone else in ill health into removing his licensed, insured and BSSC'd boat away from it's mooring on privately owned land and into a fairly distant marina by threatening to seize steal it on the grounds of refusal to pay an unlawfully demanded EoG mooring fee.

  3.  

    . . . . . . . . . Much as people here would like CRT staff and executives to think collectively as if they were all of one mind, it ain't gonna happen.

     

    I don't see that there can be any doubt that senior C&RT staff and executives DO at least act, if not think, collectively.

     

    The real problem is that the collective 'mind' is misguided, ill-intentioned, and irretrievably addled, but nonetheless firmly set on this PR crusade which is nothing more than a cynical attempt to help to create an illusion of being well run and efficient, whilst at the same time, diverting attention away from their lamentable performance as a navigation authority.

    • Greenie 1
  4.  

    Worse still, this Amended Defence is written many months after they had had the opportunity to study the original Reply to Defence, wherein the judgment of Hildyard J was several times cited in contradiction of what they persist in claiming still, despite his unappealed findings.

     

     

    Despite the Order, made on 5 July last, restoring C&RT's struck out Claim against me and ordering a Directions Hearing on the f.a.d. after 15 August 2016, the Nottingham County Court have yet to fix a date for Directions, so taking into account the usual interval between notice and hearing, C&RT aren't going to have the opportunity for a lower Court rehearsal of any of these lame arguments re. the MNC and the ludicrous assertions that the 1983 Act repealed certain 'inconvenient' aspects of the 1971 Act.

  5.  

    That is a bit naughty Tony, lulling people into a sense of false security.

     

    As you well know – just because CaRT have no say over the use of those moorings legally, does not mean that they will not section 8 you for staying over 14 days there.

     

    You are in the estimable Mr Garner’s territory there after all; the County Court is close by and enjoys frequent acquaintance with him and his cohorts.

     

     

    Not strictly true, Nigel, . . . although they will revoke your boat Licence or PBC and then Section 8 your boat for not having what they have just unlawfully deprived you of, . . . and I think they should be given every opportunity and encouragement to stick their heads into that particular noose as frequently as possible.

     

    I do have it on good authority that Garner and Shoosmiths have now been allocated their own parking spaces at Nottingham County Court.

  6. Not long before the third Case Management Hearing! Hope finally to get directions in the case moving it forward, now that CaRT has failed in their Strike-Out application.

     

    CaRT’s Amended Defence, following Leigh’s filing of his amended Particulars of Claim [as the Master had ordered]: -

     

    https://www.scribd.com/document/321875292/Ravenscroft-v-CaRT-Amended-Defence

     

    Leigh’s Reply to that, filed today: -

     

    https://www.scribd.com/document/321875290/Ravenscroft-v-CaRT-Reply-to-Amended-Defence

     

    We will have to prepare skeleton arguments over the issues to be decided no doubt, but that will be immediately prior to the hearing.

     

     

    That Amended Defence seems very feeble to me.

    The studious avoidance of the PRN issue, the pathetic attempts to establish some interchangeability in effect and function between a 'Licence' and a [registration] 'Certificate', and resorting yet again to the S.13/Houseboat nonsense, all smacks of the despair that must be felt by those being sent to a gunfight, armed only with a bag of rocks, . . . poor Mr Stoner !

  7. Similarly, it's illegal on the non tidal Thames (AFAIK, I think I saw something about any sea toilet being sealed with tape when entering the river) but fully legal on the tidal.

     

    It's not generally known, but this requirement was the inspiration for the amusing practice of carefully stretching [wrinkle-free] clingfilm across the tops of lavatory bowls.

  8. Hellooooo

     

    The best moorings are on the river just under Trent bridge along the embankment next to the City hall thingy. Plenty of rings and suprisingly quiet on an evening and thro the night. Short walk to some nice pubs and food joints.

     

    Tim

     

    No time restrictions on the length of stay on these moorings either, . . . . the land alongside the river is under the control/ownership of Notts County Council, and C&RT have no say over the use of these moorings.

  9.  

    . . . . . . . . . . . . . Or, . . . . why are the lights there at all ?

    The story is, there were never any lights, or anything else, back in the days when there was commercial traffic [off the Trent in Sheffield-size and Lincoln-size barges] to the mills down near Stamp End.

    Normal practice was to swing in the Brayford and drop down stern first through the swing bridge and the Glory Hole.

     

    From the two replies below it seems that there is some confusion with regard to the potentially dangerous situation that pleasure craft could unwittingly get themselves into when leaving the Brayford on the Witham and running down to Stamp End during or immediately after a wet spell but with only a relatively small rise in water levels.

     

    What danger are you expecting?

     

    It is fairly obvious to anyone when the conditions through there are such that the flashing red warning light would be showing well before you reach the entrance.

     

    ETA: Video of high flow situation.

     

     

     

    Indeed. As I said, faced with a red light and no readable explanation, the danger I was expecting was a widebeam coming through a narrow blind channel, having been given a green light at the other end of a one-way system (Like Foulridge tunnel's, for example.)

     

    MP.

     

    The river Witham runs into Brayford Pool under the railway in the South Eastern corner and runs out of the North Eastern corner where the swingbridge has been replaced with a fly-over which now allows un-hindered passage, in the direction of the current, from still water on the Brayford side of where the swingbridge was into what can sometimes be very fast running water through the old swingbridge abuttments and through the Glory Hole.

     

    Coming upriver in these conditions [in a Westerly direction from Stamp End to the Brayford] with a lot of 'fresh' on, any boats will be able to see the Glory Hole from a good way off, but they will be stemming a very strong, fast current and the only potential danger they face is that of a boat running the bridge [with the current] and unable to slow down or stop.

     

    The very real potential danger now that the swingbridge has gone, and because you can't see the Glory Hole until you're through and clear of where the old swingbridge was, is that boats travelling in an Easterly direction [out of the Brayford] can find themselves leaving virtually still water, into a very fast current in the space of less than a boats length as they pass between the old swingbridge abuttments, and committed to running the Glory Hole even in the event of there being insufficient headroom, or a boat coming the other way.

     

    These warning/traffic lights, even if working as intended, are not really of any use at all if there is any appreciable current running through there.

    If the water level is up, even by only a few inches, and there is anything more than the slightest of currents running, then anything but the lightest and smallest of boats, or boats sufficiently powerful and controllable enough to stop end-on with the current, should swing in the Brayford and drop down sternfirst to Stamp End.

  10. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . As an aside, why red for warning? What's wrong with the far less confusing amber?

     

    Anyone know the story?

     

    MP.

     

     

    . . . . . . . . . . . . . Or, . . . . why are the lights there at all ?

    The story is, there were never any lights, or anything else, back in the days when there was commercial traffic [off the Trent in Sheffield-size and Lincoln-size barges] to the mills down near Stamp End.

    Normal practice was to swing in the Brayford and drop down stern first through the swing bridge and the Glory Hole.

  11. Thanks, Tony. If I understand you correctly, the engine is as you describe: 1adc11cbb7aaf7dabcd1b1fadaf68d7d_zpsis72

    The test you suggest is helpful, too.

     

    The test described, on it's own, will narrow the problem down to being either water leakage into to inlet combustion air flow, or a head gasket leaking between a water passage and a cylinder wall, so the best way forward with this is to carry out the under load [with the cap loose] running test and a combustion gas leakage test at the same time.

    The results from the combined test will indicate whether it's head/head gasket or a leaking [ into the inlet ports] heat exchanger casting.

     

    Before getting even this relatively simple and inexpensive test done, it would be well worth you running it up under load to smoking temperature with the cap off and watching for any sign of air bubbles forming and surfacing under and around the filler neck on the H'ex'er, or combined manifolds/header tank if it's keel cooled. If it's head or head gasket there will be a distinct smell, similar to diesel exhaust fumes, coming out of the filler neck whilst the engine is running.

     

    If your engine is identical to the one in the photo's you've posted, and particularly if it's keel cooled, it would be well worth checking for water leaks from the rubber piping on the engine oil cooler, . . . . the air intake is just above, and very close, and there could be something as simple as a pin hole leak spraying water at it.

  12. Thanks, Tony - no turbocharger on this engine, though.

     

    I can't remember the model or type, but I can recall, on an occasion when attending to some sterngear problems on a Vetus engined boat, noticing that the inlet manifold had been incorporated into the heat exchanger/exhaust manifold casting.

    This is a little unusual, but probably done that way on that particular engine because of cylinder head design and port positioning considerations.

    If your engine has a similar heat exchanger body/casting, then a defect or crack in the casting could possibly allow coolant to seep into the inlet combustion air flow as temperature and cooling system pressure rises with the engine under load.

    You could commence checking for and eliminating this possibility by running the engine up to the load/temperature conditions when the white smoke has been appearing, but with the H/ex'er pressure cap left loose.

  13. Good morning everyone - I hope someone can point me in the right direction.

     

    We've got a Dutch steel cruiser with an almost new (70 hours) Vetus VH4.65. Some time ago we picked up a sleeping bag on the prop - so lots of black smoke as we limped home (we couldn't stop for a while as we were on the Trent.) Unfortunately, at the same time, the exhaust riser worked its way free and therefore a lot of this black smoke was released into the engiine bay (and so sucked in by the engine). Anyway, we got the sleeping bag removed, and everything seemed fine at first.

     

    However, the engine is now very smoky (white smoke) after 30 minutes or so under load. It's not at all smoky when running out of gear - even at moderately high revs and for long periods of time. The fuel is clean and free of water. Air intake is fine.

     

    Any thoughts? I'm not sure the bit of history in para 2 is relevant, but seems to me it might be.

     

    Thanks for that. There's certainly been some loss of coolant - would that be part of it? Would symptoms be different under load and not under load, though?

     

    I'm not familiar with this particular engine model, but the white smoke after a spell under load and the coolant loss are typically symptomatic of a leaking intercooler matrix on a turbocharged engine.

  14. Another reference to use Tony – the draft 2010 Byelaws:

     

     

    Thanks for that info, Nigel, . . . I wasn't aware of that draft.

     

    It scarcely seems credible, even for the zealous Mr Garner, but from phone calls I have received today, it appears that one elderly gentleman has received a letter from Mr Garner threatening to come down this Friday to seize his fully ‘licensed’ boat on his own private mooring on the river Trent, because he has refused to pay an EoG demand. In light of the long-published EoG Informative by BW, acknowledging that on these rivers BW/CaRT have no right to payment for such moorings, the claimed scenario beggars belief.

     

    Even IF, which BW themselves denied, they had the right to demand such a mooring fee, there is absolutely NO legislation authorising seizure of boats for any such alleged debt. I await copies of the relevant correspondence with breathless anticipation; IF what I have been told is true, it will be grist for the mill in Tony’s and Leigh’s case in terms of demonstrating the loose cannon that is this particular enforcement officer, operating under the specific warm approval of the CEO.

     

    But it cannot be real, surely?

     

    If this really is about to happen, then it is almost beyond belief that C&RT are about to embark on yet another ill-advised and illegal pantomime involving the same criminal offences committed when they seized and removed Leigh's boat from it's mooring at Farndon.

  15.  

    Presumably they are positioned relative to the 'hazard' so you have to pass them to Port side when heading downstream.

     

    They would have been better to use the cardinal markers then there would be no question which side to pass.

     

     

    Or they could be marking multiple wrecks, all sunk in a neat row after hitting an unmarked obstruction which has been placed in the river without Planning Permission.

     

    I doubt that C&RT would want to use Cardinal marks without 'prior consent' from the Vatican.

    • Greenie 2
  16. Nice row of green buoys now visible from Carrington bridge over the Severn by the Ketch pub

     

    I think you may be missing the point.

    These green buoys are navigational marks, and whatever the Waterways Nobrainsman may think, do NOT require Planning consent prior to establishment.

  17.  

    Definitely Brain of Britain material this ombudsman. I had a look at the houseboat assignment case [which was at least helpful for the complainant selling the boat, if not for the purchaser], and his Solomonic grasp of the relevant legislative background is breath-taking.

     

    I decided that whether it would be assignable should be determined by the Trust’s own rules and policies. There are certain conditions under which a houseboat certificate would not be assignable . . .”

     

    the 1971 Act provides only for a houseboat certificate to be transferred for the unexpired portion of the current certificate. My view was that there was no basis on which I could decide that an assigned certificate should be renewable indefinitely.”

     

    If any excuse existed for this gentleman’s profound and willing ignorance, none does for Ms Lewis, to whom he will have turned for approval.

     

     

    Having looked back over the correspondence and communications with Walker in 2014 when he was colluding with C&RT during his 'independent' investigation into the formal Complaint I had made, there are distinct echoes here of almost exactly the same degree of profound ignorance and weird thinking.

     

    In Walker's strange world 'mal-administration' occurs only if C&RT fail to adhere to their own policies and procedures, irrespective of whether or not those same policies and procedures are in line with whatever is laid down in the relevant legislation.

  18.  

    Definitely Brain of Britain material this ombudsman. I had a look at the houseboat assignment case [which was at least helpful for the complainant selling the boat, if not for the purchaser], and his Solomonic grasp of the relevant legislative background is breath-taking.

     

    I decided that whether it would be assignable should be determined by the Trust’s own rules and policies. There are certain conditions under which a houseboat certificate would not be assignable . . .”

     

    the 1971 Act provides only for a houseboat certificate to be transferred for the unexpired portion of the current certificate. My view was that there was no basis on which I could decide that an assigned certificate should be renewable indefinitely.”

     

    If any excuse existed for this gentleman’s profound and willing ignorance, none does for Ms Lewis, to whom he will have turned for approval.

     

     

    What I find most disturbing about Walker is that prior to embarking on the present chapter in his career, he held a fairly responsible position looking after nuclear reactors.

     

    I think we can all count ourselves very fortunate not to have been vapourized into oblivion, . . . the level of risk in having someone such as this messing about with a nuclear reactor certainly puts the Cuban missile crisis into a different perspective.

  19.  

     

    Since when did not living on it and keeping it in a marina* excuse you from needing a licence?

     

     

     

    *Unless one of the few not subject to a NAA. Which marina is it?

     

    If the boat is in a Marina, then it isn't on C&RT waters and doesn't need to be licensed, . . . . whatever the fantasists in C&RT may say, or wish, to the contrary.

  20. We're hoping that the work can be done over the Winter period, so the time taken to replace isn't a big issue.

    The cost is relevant, although it's divided by ten and reliability is also crucial. Our current breakdown has wrecked one Summer holiday.

     

     

    I have got a low mileage/hours, ex-vehicle 1.8 bare engine which I've had in stock for quite some time. It's a BLMC 'Gold Seal' factory exchange engine that came out of an MOT failure van.

    If your engine is repairable, then a straight exchange with your present one would get you going again with minimal delay.

  21.  

    Might be worth asking C&RT for the 'MOC Box Chart' for the Trent !!!!!

     

    Got it already, Alan.

    It specifies the minimum dredged navigable channel dimensions on the Upper Trent, what they call the 'Minimum Open Channel' as 7.0 metres wide by 1.3 metres deep, at which point they consider that dredging has become necessary, . . . subject, presumably, to Planning Permission !

  22. The Waterways Odbumsman has just published his Annual Report for the year 2015 - 2016 containing what appears to be the lamest and most ridiculous excuse yet offered up for C&RT's inability to function as a competent and responsible navigation authority :~

     

    Case No 823 – the marking of shallows on the River Severn

    Mr D has a boat which he moors at a marina on the River Severn. In July 2013 his boat hit an underwater obstruction near Worcester, which damaged it. He said that other people’s boats had hit the same obstruction and that in some cases the cost of repairing the damage had been substantial. Mr D felt that the Trust had been slow in dealing with and marking the obstruction.

    It seems to have taken some time for the Trust to have accepted the existence of the hazard. Part of the problem is that apart from a single instance in March 2012, its incidents log had no record of any incidents at that location between 2004 and the grounding of Mr D’s boat in July 2013. Minimum Open Channel (MOC) box charts provided by the Trust, depicting the river depth and the boundaries of the navigable channel, showed that at some points on the bend in the river where the hazard was located, the MOC box was entirely outside the centre line of the river, which would generally be regarded as the safest course navigate, and that on the outside of the bend there are shallows. While this may not pose a major problem for flat-bottomed boats such as barges or narrowboats, Mr D’s boat had a V‑shaped keel and therefore a deeper maximum draught. Even after the Trust seemed to accept the existence of the hazard, Mr D felt that it was too slow in taking action to mark the hazard.

    The Trust accepted that information about the hazard might not have been uploaded to its incidents database, and that there was scope for improvement in its record-keeping system. It said that this would be raised at a senior level within the Trust.

    It also explained to me that once it became clear that there was a hazard, the marking of it necessitated the obtaining of planning permission from two local authorities and consent from the Environment Agency. Although Mr D at one point noted that there had been progress, his view was that a whole year had elapsed with little or no progress. I concluded that the evidence provided by Mr D, about incidents having been reported to the Trust, was persuasive. I also concluded that the Trust had been slow to act.

    I recommended that:

    1. that the Trust provide Mr D with an explanation of what actions it had taken, or was proposing to take, to address any deficiencies in the incident logging and reporting system, both locally and across the Trust;
    2. that the Trust provide Mr D with an update on progress about marking the hazard, and navigation guide, with its best estimate for completion; and
    3. that the Trust confirm that it accepted the existence of the hazard and the lack of any navigation guide.

    I decided that the Trust should also provide an update to other licence holders in the area.

  23. My Hurth gearbox engages gear, forward or reverse, with a loud clunk. .

    In fact it sounds as though it 'slams' into gear no matter how gentle the gear lever is moved. Once in gear it runs quietly.

    I appreciate the gearbox has an internal thrust plate assisted by oil pressure that helps push the gearwheels fully home, but there is no adjustment as such.

    It is partly to do with engine speed, that in neutral is set at a minimum for smooth running - about 600 rpm - I can't run any slower because the engine leaps about on the rubber mounts.

    I just wonder if other boaters have this problem ? - and maybe a cure please?

     

    Be grateful that it does, . . . when Hurth boxes start engaging gears smoothly and quietly it either means they're about clapped out, and on the verge of failing to engage drive at all, or if you're lucky, just very long overdue for an oil change.

    The harsh engagement is due to both clutches incorporating an identical mechanical self-servo feature which operates as the driven plates begin to engage with the drivers.

    There is no pressurized oil operation or lubrication in Hurth mechanical boxes.

  24. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . .

     

    The problem I have is that the banjos of 8mm internal diameter won't fit over the thread of a M10, or 7/16" UNF thread?

     

    This is not a problem, . . . . the 4 x smaller [8 mm banjos] connect the leak-off rail to the top of each of the 4 x injector cap-nuts, but the problem you have got is that the larger [brass] banjo on the end of the leak-off rail isn't commonned into the top of the filter head with the banjo on the end of the pipe that should return to the top of the tank, but which at present goes [incorrectly] back to a primary [sediment trap] filter.

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