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DSK wrote in message ...
N1EE wrote: Your spring project reports are due soon. (10 pts) Well, since I'm working on the boat pretty much full time, I don't really have any "spring" projects. But here is a list of what is currently going on: Final stages of installing heater: wiring 12V power to the main board, insulating the exhaust (which involves wrapping a special hi-temp "spun ceramic" (does that sound better then just plain "fiberglass"?) Sounds better than asbestos! tape around the exhaust pipe inside the welded-on heat shield... not fun), filling & testing the water loop, finish the mounting & insulating of the water loop hoses, route the air intake. Maybe by summer the heater will be working! Installing remote mike/speaker/control head for VHF radio. Should of bought one with that feature! Clean engine heate exchangers, install new hose. Yeah me to soon. Install new raw water impeller. Yelp me to soon Rebuild battery platform (already done this for the genset start battery)... btw a great source of strong rot & rust proof material is thick plastic cutting board. It's resistant to battery acid too and a really big one costs $7 at Wal-Mart or the like. Much cheaper than Star-Board! Yelp we use walmart big batteries they last 2 years or so Remake fuel system connection with slow (1 drop every 3 days) leak. Ugh, do you have an air trap? Install check valve in fuel line to genset. Your gen set fuel pump does not have a check valve buildt in? Build up spoke/hub of steering wheel to make it less wobbly. I have to have at least one ongoing job invovling WEST epoxy. Not gonna last, your wasting time, afro american engineering. Later this year I'm going to install a new house battery bank. To show what involved, the first step is cutting a hatch in the fore cabin sole to get access under that space. One reason the heater project has taken so long is that every little step has required the massive amounts of planning, re-planning, and eons of labor. Sounds like a cramped little boat. My report: Hull Fairing and Painting Project Hoo-ee... now there's a LOT of labor. Yelp so much Ill never bother to do redclouds hull. I like the salty look ;0) Joe I've faired some boats 24' and smaller. One thing to do that makes it easier to see what's happening is to use different colors, just t little, in each successive batch of fairing compound. I feel it should not take more than three passes to get it all perfect (although on a 46' hull, each pass represents a HUGE amount of labor) otherwise you're just plastering it on and sanding it off. But the results are really nice... fairing the hull was the single biggest go-fast improvement I did to the Lightning. Fresh Breezes- Doug King |
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