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keith.

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Posts posted by keith.

  1. In order to answer the question we need to know your prescription. It sounds like you need it during walking or exertion and you need 2/3 lpm I am assuming through a nasal cannula. 

     

    MGS probably can supply your needs better as their cylinders operate at a higher pressure.

    For example: http://www.medicalgassolutions.co.uk/prod/emergency-services-gases/1-litre-carbon-wrap-oxygen    This is a 305 litre capacity which even at your high setting would give 100 minutes. Obviously there are larger cylinders. 

     

    BOC's standard cylinder the CD weighs 3.5kgs and contains 460 litres or about 150 minutes supply.

     

    The person to see is your long term conditions nurse in the first instance. The aim of the health service is to try and give you a decent quality of life and they are usually happy to prescribe portable cylinders. 

     

    An average Emergency Ambulance carries up to 6000 litres of oxygen and is not fitted with any oxygen meter nor have I ever seen one in a patients house. 

  2. I have navigated the Trent from Trentlock to Torksey and return and from Trentlock to Keadby in a narrowboat. 

    I had an anchor, life-jackets and VHF. I also had the Boating Association publications and Nicholson guide. 

    VHF is a luxury that to contact the lock keepers with is not necessary, however Nicholson states that below Gainsborough the Trent is controlled by ABP who require craft to have 2 crew and a VHF radio. 

    The first journey was only to Torksey and we booked our passage through Cromwell Lock by telephone. The lock keeper agreed with my plan and let us through the lock at or just before high tide at Cromwell so that we travelled to Torksey with the ebb. The Boating Association booklets were OK but when you really needed their advice (such as which arch to go under) I found the information about grafitti of little help. The river is sign posted (take binoculars to read well in advance) and the navigational notes in Nicholson are invaluable. 

    The second journey to Keadby we planned to stop at Gainsborough pontoon. The lock keeper at Cromwell advised against it because of high spring tides. A man in the pub at Torksey advised that sometimes stones were thrown at boats moored at Gainsborough. We left Cromwell again at Cromwell high tide and made an uneventful journey to Torksey. We left Torksey the next day an hour before high tide Torksey and pushed the incoming tide for just under an hour. The lock keeper at Keadby telephoned and asked about progress. He advised us to speed up. We had an uneventful journey until we got to Keadby. Passing Keadby bridge I stayed too close to the right hand bank and ran aground on a sand bank just before the lock entrance. We reversed off and entered Keadby lock with perhaps a little too much power but stayed clear of the lock walls. The Keadby lock keeper was surprised at the advice not to moor at Gainsborough and reckoned that with good mooring ropes there would have been no problem. 

    The non tidal locks were not manned at that time of the year. Observe the amber traffic lights and do go into the lock approaches fully to moor up. 

    Don't hang around on the trip from Torksey to Keadby and I am sure that you will have a great day. 

    This video gives some idea of how big the Trent is against a narrowboat and encourages you to wear life jackets. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FTzyAoAuBV4

     

  3. The O/P merely wanted to know if any member could recommend a radio/CD player that didn't need an always live lead for their boat. They received one recommendation for specialist marine equipment without the clarity of whether Fusion needed an always live lead or not. They also received the comment that one member was going to replace a Sony unit for something else. 

    Since then it has degenerated into one poster trying to demonstrate how much money they must have with a gardener and Wharfdale speakers that they now no longer use and another poster explaining that bit rate is all important to audio quality.

     

    The O/P still doesn't have an answer to his question. I have learnt a fair bit from this site in general terms but like the whole internet it is difficult to get specific facts without fronting up with cash.

  4. On 28/03/2017 at 20:12, Lottiespal said:

    We are planning a trip to Nottingham this Spring and are intending to go via the GU Leicester line and River Soar. Have already travelled this trip clockwise some years ago and got lots of tips from the forum then which will be useful this time I'm sure. We've planned the route via Nick's Canal Plan and 2 of the overnight stops suggested are North Lock 42 & Bishops Meadow Lock 54, neither of which I can remember from our last trip. Would be grateful if any members familiar with that stretch would advise on their suitability for an overnight stop. TIA

    I personally think that the Soar through and around Leicester is disgusting. Stay in Leicester at Castle Gardens or Friars Mill VM.

    Bishops Meadow is OK but if you stop before Loughborough Town Lock you will have all the usual services. The Loughborough Basin is OK if a trifle noisy.

  5. 3. What type of head?

     

    The sea toilet is prohibited in most inland waterways.

     

    The Elsan will last 2 adults 2 days max and then has to be emptied restricting your movements. Obviously spare cassettes can be used.

     

    The composting toilet has to have urine emptied daily or so and the poo tank monthly or so.

     

    The pump out has to be emptied every 2 weeks or so, costs £15 a time and has the same restriction as finding an Elsan emptying point. Additionally, if you are iced in it is a problem taking the boat to the point.

     

    Having tried all 4 I would go for a pump out backed up by a porta potti. Get the pump out emptied regularly at a base that does it for you.

  6.  

    I've read that some are upgrading their domestic battery banks by have more batteries, not less.... we just want to make sure, it's a big investment to get wrong.

     

    The trick is to know how many ah you are using between charges. Then bearing in mind that the best balance between initial cost, time to charge and life of battery is to size your bank so that between charges you using 20% - 50% capacity, you can determine your battery bank size.

    • Greenie 1
  7. I am fairly new myself but the consensus is to get cheapish flooded lead acid batteries and a decent monitoring system and learn the black art of battery care/charging before buying expensive batteries.

     

    It is more about how you use them than what they are.

     

    I know a motorhome owner who rarely camps without an electric hookup. To the extent that the original battery is still fitted after 10 years and the first gas bottle has just been changed over. On the other hand stories abound on this forum of wrecking a set of batteries in under 3 months.

     

    I would make sure that the old batteries were given a good charging before declaring them dead.

  8. We're moored on the new pontoons right now! Castle Gardens was full, so rather than breast up we though we'd see if there was any room at Friar's Mill. It was empty, so we tied up, have been into the city and come back, been to Tesco and come back. There are signs on the first gate about a number to phone if you're there out of ours, and about parking being for tenants, not people visiting boaters. There is nothing to say the moorings aren't open yet.

     

    You are correct. There is nothing to indicate that they are not open nor indeed that they are CRT moorings at all. How did you get out once the main gates are locked at 5.00 pm or so?

  9. Yes, you can open the main gates with crt key 24/7.

     

    I wasn't sure how to do this as the big double gates by the car park have combination padlocks. A call to the local CRT chap and I was rather curtly informed that the moorings aren't officially open yet.

     

    The real question to Peter Soulsby (Leicester Mayor) is why bother? There is ample mooring with rings and bollards all down the mile straight and beyond yet not one boat. Of course the pile of cans, bottles and rubbish by every bench might shed some light on the usual activities there. Both guide books state that between Birstall and Kilby Bridge the only secure mooring is at Castle Gardens. What a state of affairs for a city that wanted to be City of Culture 2017. So why not clean it up and open up what could be a delightful asset? Obviously, those with alcohol problems would need looking after but I am sure it would be the right thing to do.

  10. Without a doubt alcohol does negative stuff to your abilities. Hopefully nobody is going to argue that point. Personally, I have had my share over the years although age (and recovery rates) have tempered my drinking a bit. I do not drink when moving along the canal. My reason being that it would hurt (a lot) to fall off a lock gate onto a cill.

     

    I used to reverse my car onto my drive. Something that I had done daily for years. I had a single G&T at 7.00 pm and at 8.30 pm took 4 attempts to reverse onto my drive (and still hit the wing mirror). Lesson learned, no drinking and driving. I see no difference when on the canal.

  11. I have recently been told to ring emergency services on 112 if using mobile because they can immediately determine your location ..is the true and accurate

     

    112 is the European wide number and theoretically should give access to an English speaking operator when in mainland Europe. There is no way of determining your location when using a mobile phone without a big faff. Whatever number you call the mast that your phone is connected to is known and if nothing else is known that is the location that the emergency services will get given.

  12. I read it as sound outer overplating but a couple of holes made by grinding from the inside in the original hull. Then I suspect a failure of the water tank and the hull filled with water allowing it to enter the two holes and get between the original hull and the overplating.

     

    I think that the water has to be given an escape route so drilling a hole(s) at the lowest point would be necessary and then venting the space with an airline. Then finally making good all the holes in both original hull and overplating. The only problem is ensuring not drilling through both overplate and original hull!!

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