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Joe
 
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Default Damage control

What type of damage control gear do you keep on board.?

Dunnage, plugs. bracing, patches, ect to keep your vessel floating if
you hole your hull.

Joe
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katysails
 
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We have a complete set of bung plugs that match all our through hull hole
sizes, plus a great assortment of life vests of the kapok floppy sort left
over from when the boat was raced that could be stuffed into a big hole plus
there's an extra old genny that we keep forward in the v-berth...
"Joe" wrote in message
om...
What type of damage control gear do you keep on board.?

Dunnage, plugs. bracing, patches, ect to keep your vessel floating if
you hole your hull.

Joe



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Michael
 
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besides the good items mentioned by Katy and Joe that some various bits of
plywood and a tub of plastic cement that seals while wet. I tried the
plywood bits to see where they would fit, where they might help without
being toolarge to store or too small to be of use. What I got rid of was
too many through hulls and oh yes, the panic prone. Going a bit further
with the old sail was to make one into collision mats already rigged with
lines. Finally the bow area is made into a collision bulkhead. Closest
I've come so far is hitting a floating log up in BC and having an engine
stick in forward gear while laying the boat into it's slip. Knock on
formica.

M.

"katysails" wrote in message
...
We have a complete set of bung plugs that match all our through hull hole
sizes, plus a great assortment of life vests of the kapok floppy sort left
over from when the boat was raced that could be stuffed into a big hole

plus
there's an extra old genny that we keep forward in the v-berth...
"Joe" wrote in message
om...
What type of damage control gear do you keep on board.?

Dunnage, plugs. bracing, patches, ect to keep your vessel floating if
you hole your hull.

Joe





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Scout
 
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I believe Seahag prefers the butt connectors.
As for me, I keep a pair of clean shorts onboard.
Scout

"katysails" wrote
We have a complete set of bung plugs



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katysails
 
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To each his own, I guess.....
And I think its' not the butt connectors Haggie likes but the butts
themselves that she admires (or so I've heard...)
"Scout" wrote in message
...
I believe Seahag prefers the butt connectors.
As for me, I keep a pair of clean shorts onboard.
Scout

"katysails" wrote
We have a complete set of bung plugs







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Scott Vernon
 
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OH! That's what I forgot to get at the chandlery yesterday. The
wood plugs I had ( they came with the boat) were still in the original
plastic bag but they turned to mush.

gotta write it down.

Scotty

"katysails" wrote in message
...
We have a complete set of bung plugs that match all our through hull

hole
sizes, plus a great assortment of life vests of the kapok floppy

sort left
over from when the boat was raced that could be stuffed into a big

hole plus
there's an extra old genny that we keep forward in the v-berth...
"Joe" wrote in message
om...
What type of damage control gear do you keep on board.?

Dunnage, plugs. bracing, patches, ect to keep your vessel floating

if
you hole your hull.

Joe





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Maxprop
 
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"Scott Vernon" wrote in message

OH! That's what I forgot to get at the chandlery yesterday. The
wood plugs I had ( they came with the boat) were still in the original
plastic bag but they turned to mush.


Obviously the plugs should be fairly soft, such as basswood, pine, or soft
maple (which is actually a hardwood, but a softer one). But those woods are
prone to rot, if allowed to remain damp for periods. Soak them in some sort
of oil, such as linseed, before storing them. Or you can make them from
teak, but they'll be more difficult to keep in a thru-hull after driving
them in.

Max


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DSK
 
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Maxprop wrote:
Obviously the plugs should be fairly soft, such as basswood, pine, or soft
maple (which is actually a hardwood, but a softer one). But those woods are
prone to rot, if allowed to remain damp for periods. Soak them in some sort
of oil, such as linseed, before storing them. Or you can make them from
teak, but they'll be more difficult to keep in a thru-hull after driving
them in.


Frankly, I think duct tape and a trash bag is a lot more useful than a
plug. If a seacock breaks, it is unlikely to leave a nice neat round
hole to drive a plug in. But who am I to argue with age-old tradition?

DSK

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Jeff Morris
 
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The plugs have come in handy for me because they're easy to jam into a hose.
Sometimes you don't want to force a seacock, or they can be hard to reach.

"DSK" wrote in message
. ..
Maxprop wrote:
Obviously the plugs should be fairly soft, such as basswood, pine, or soft
maple (which is actually a hardwood, but a softer one). But those woods are
prone to rot, if allowed to remain damp for periods. Soak them in some sort
of oil, such as linseed, before storing them. Or you can make them from
teak, but they'll be more difficult to keep in a thru-hull after driving
them in.


Frankly, I think duct tape and a trash bag is a lot more useful than a
plug. If a seacock breaks, it is unlikely to leave a nice neat round
hole to drive a plug in. But who am I to argue with age-old tradition?

DSK



  #10   Report Post  
Jonathan Ganz
 
Posts: n/a
Default

We have plugs and duct tape/plastic onboard. The real joke is
the "emergency tiller." It would only take about 1/2 hour to get
the damn thing on. We tried it one day at the dock, what a joke.
(This was on a Yamaha 30.)

--
"j" ganz @@
www.sailnow.com

"DSK" wrote in message
. ..
Maxprop wrote:
Obviously the plugs should be fairly soft, such as basswood, pine, or
soft
maple (which is actually a hardwood, but a softer one). But those woods
are
prone to rot, if allowed to remain damp for periods. Soak them in some
sort
of oil, such as linseed, before storing them. Or you can make them from
teak, but they'll be more difficult to keep in a thru-hull after driving
them in.


Frankly, I think duct tape and a trash bag is a lot more useful than a
plug. If a seacock breaks, it is unlikely to leave a nice neat round hole
to drive a plug in. But who am I to argue with age-old tradition?

DSK





 
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