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keltiks' 1980s Ross 35


keltik

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  • 3 weeks later...

So we have this dehumidifier my dad bought for his boat back in 2001

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It sits in the cabin and runs all week to keep the dank away. And it does a good job.

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(Still doing the Wednesday night racing on this one)

It's been dropped, smashed upside down falling from one side of the boat to the other, left on its side for days in the boot of the car...

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The plastic has turned yellow and the power cord has been replaced, but after 20 years of operating in a salt spray environment

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It still works.  Today's project was to add a bracket to stop it rolling around while we're sailing.  I've heard new ones last a couple years if you're lucky so this one must be protected.

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  • 4 weeks later...

Did the Mayor island race.  There was approximately fuck all wind. 

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Managed to get within 2 miles of the island before we gave up and motored to south east bay for the BBQ

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Had some beautiful serenity, a few sausages and a few rums then headed home.

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The run home from Mayor was mint, the wind picked up a bit so we stuck up ol' purple.  Need to run the pole a bit higher next time I think.  This is such a versatile sail for the wind angles its effective in.  I'd been enjoying using our big blue gennaker but its got a very narrow window where it flies well compared to this one.

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Then when the wind picked up to 15 knots, dropped it and finished the run with the main and #1 genoa up.

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Couple weeks later, decided to get the old boat out again and do the round Rotoiti race as a good excuse to show it off and make sure everything still works.  There was approximately fuck all wind.

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A few boats dropped out of the race, but 5 hours later - we finished 2nd over the line.  Had been in the lead for quite a while but got pipped in the last mile of the race.  I'd love to say perseverance pays off but it was a pretty painful day.  It was VERY amusing how light and easy everything was to handle compared to the new boat.

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So after 5 hours trying to get every possible bit of speed out of the tiny amount of wind provided - I was keen to have a day off and relax.

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So the next day I decided to do the Karewa island race on the new boat.  There was approximately fuck all wind to start with.

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The only other 3 boats that had entered left us behind by the time we were rounding the Island.  

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By the time we finished - somehow crossed the line in second place, only 8 mins behind first after 4 hours of sailing.  Turns out I looked at the wrong course and missed out 1 leg so got a DNF.  Live and learn.

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Have been using the big blue sunshade quite a bit lately and managed to get it a bit salty so brought the sail home for a wash and some minor repairs.

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A quick run through the bath to wash off the salt

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Then dried in the sun on the front lawn (which isnt quite big enough)

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Then taping up a couple of small rips - not sure when they happened but the whole sail is pretty old so getting fragile.

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There's plenty of repairs in this sail already so a couple more squares of tape won't hurt too much.  

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Revised list of things to do on Extract Digit;

The speedo paddle wheel gets chock full of marine life growing in it and stops turning.  I tried a little propspeed foul release type coating but this didn't work that well. So the best method to keep it clean is to remove it from the hull each time you leave the boat.  This is pretty easy to do and there's a plug that goes in its place.  But every time its removed or fitted, it lets a few cups of water into the boat. So I'm going to create a spill ring around the fitting (possibly using an ice cream tub) so the water stays in one spot instead of running through the bilge.  Will make cleanup a lot quicker.

Get some anchor chain.  At the moment, the boat only has 10 meters of chain and the rest is warp/rope.  The warp doesn't go through the windlass quite as nicely as chain and keeps snarling up.  I prefer chain anyways and am not as worried about the weight penalty (previous owner will be most disappointed in me) of another 20m of chain especially for the extra security it offers.

Sort out an autopilot.  Looking at about $3,800 to buy a new one suitable for the size of the boat.  Could possibly get away with a $1,500 all-in-one tiller pilot but sometimes it pays to just cry once and buy the right tool for the job even if its does cost twice as much.

Sort out an interface between the Raymarine wind/depth instruments and the B&G chartplotter so it can display wind angles on the chart and do some other fancy trickery.  

Money for all that stuff is limited at the moment as we're saving for our holiday - but should be achievable later in the year.

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  • 1 month later...
On 24/02/2024 at 18:47, keltik said:

So I'm going to create a spill ring around the fitting (possibly using an ice cream tub) so the water stays in one spot instead of running through the bilge.  Will make cleanup a lot quicker.

The little paddle wheel speed sensor thing

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And my soon to be patented spill ring device.  

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K-Mart silicone dog bowl with a hole cut in it then stretched over the through-hull fitting to seal against it.

Now when you undo the cap and pull the sender out, the water goes into the dog bowl and can be effortlessly sucked up with a sponge. Instead of having to lift up the carpet and floor boards and get to the lowest point of the bilge to mop it up.

Now to sell my invention for $80 a piece.

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Would be keen to come for a Wednesday night race sometime, did one years ago and it was great fun until ol mate cocked his turn up at the boat ramp into an outgoing tide and punched a hole in the bow on the jetty

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  • 3 weeks later...

Autopilot stuff. 

Gave it a lot of thought and decided that the main use I have for an autopilot is keeping us vaguely on course in light winds while I go make a cup of tea or steer the boat with the engine on which is boring if you have to do it for more than 5 minutes. 

The fancy expensive autopilots can be trusted to probably not kill you if you go down below to get some sleep while sailing through the night across the middle of the Atlantic. They react to wind gusts better and manage rolling nasty sea states under sail without getting confused as easily.

Even then, some of the long distance sailors just carry 2 or 3 of the crappy cheap ones and throw them over the side when they stop working. 

Since I don't plan on doing long passages - and in challenging conditions I'd rather be steering myself or have another meat bag driving....I bought a cheap crappy autopilot second hand.  The big brother to the one on Nice Try - the Raymarine ST2000+

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Principle of operation is simple. The built in compass keeps track of your heading. When activated, it tries to maintain that heading by extending or retracting the ram to move the tiller and turn the boat. The bigger the boat, the more force you might need to use so the gruntier the autopilot needs to be. 

The ST2000 has a brass recirculating ball drive for the ram rather than a plastic nut on an acme screw as found on the ST1000.  It also seems to have some bigger fets driving a slightly bigger motor? 

Not quite an apples to apples comparison since the ST1000 I have is from 1999 and the ST2000 is from 2012.

Still rips my undies how simple these things are inside. Autohelm designs it then Raytheon buys them out and milks the design for a few decades.  Minimal changes in nearly 30 years of production.  No limit switches or position feedback. No conformal coatings on the board, glass reinforcement in the plastic or silastic schmoo on the connectors. AvE would be disgusted.

Will install it maybe next week and see how it goes.

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Mate those are all good - my brother has a Farr 1020 and has a genuine late 80's autohelm that just will not die. Obviously you don't use it when there is lots of load on the helm but we have done several non stop runs from AKL to the BOI on the autohelm in up to 20 knots of breeze and no drama so far.

I remember seeing your yacht around AKL in some regattas and races, nice boat.

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