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To Captain Neal
As I understand it from this newsgroup, you have an identical coronado to
mine, except, I think you have a shoal keel and I do not. Apart from this difference, I believe they are more or less identical, though i suspectthat you have updated your interior as your's is a live aboard vessel. I am currently in the middle of a refit and would appreciate your advice. My first concern is the actual eorking infrastructure, I need to replace or repair the water tank and the water fixtures. Is your tank (or was it originally) only fillable from inside the boat under the aft seat? if so, did you refit this item? Did you replace your water fixtures in the head and galley? if so, how did you pulmb them? Did you fit a sea-water pump, if so, how is it plumbed to the outside? I am getting rid of the door on the head and building a nav station above the port side galley. Any advice? I am fitting my nav instruments on a swinging peice of teak that will be able to swing into the companionway while underway. How are your instruments fit? Do you have an outboard, or one of Coronado's old saildrive motors. What is your maximum speed underway with motor only? So many questions, so little space. Sailing Dave - The Storm and The Spray |
Sorry I did not answer your post the first time, Dave.
I thought you were a Bertie the Bunyip sock puppet. Have you visited my website? There are lots of pictures there that might help you with your conversions. http://captneal.homestead.com/index.html Just follow the links to the interior where you will see all the modifications I have made. I raised the dinette and put a fill in the water tank on the side of the raised area. I also put another 18-gallon water tank under the center of the cockpit between the two large stringers. I used hand pumps for water both in the head and the galley and have put tubing with a tee and a valve so I can draw water from either tank from either sink. I put a cockpit fill (little perfections page) in for the under cockpit tank but still have to fill the settee tank from inside the vessel though it is on the side of the settee now so I don't have to move the cushion. I also got rid of the old, rotten wooden top for the tank and replaced it with plastic - Star Board. I got rid of the door to the head and reversed the hanging locker door so it would open against the mast post. It gives a bit of privacy for the head this way The swinging instrument board works well. I now have an outside depth sounder which makes the use of the board optional. I use a 9.9 Honda Four which powers the boat to hull speed at about half throttle in mild conditions. It gets great gas mileage and is very quiet. It is on the transom in the factory cut-out. Feel free to ask more questions here as there are many more people here who could profit from discussing boats for once. CN "Sailing Dave" wrote in message rver.com... As I understand it from this newsgroup, you have an identical coronado to mine, except, I think you have a shoal keel and I do not. Apart from this difference, I believe they are more or less identical, though i suspectthat you have updated your interior as your's is a live aboard vessel. I am currently in the middle of a refit and would appreciate your advice. My first concern is the actual eorking infrastructure, I need to replace or repair the water tank and the water fixtures. Is your tank (or was it originally) only fillable from inside the boat under the aft seat? if so, did you refit this item? Did you replace your water fixtures in the head and galley? if so, how did you pulmb them? Did you fit a sea-water pump, if so, how is it plumbed to the outside? I am getting rid of the door on the head and building a nav station above the port side galley. Any advice? I am fitting my nav instruments on a swinging peice of teak that will be able to swing into the companionway while underway. How are your instruments fit? Do you have an outboard, or one of Coronado's old saildrive motors. What is your maximum speed underway with motor only? So many questions, so little space. Sailing Dave - The Storm and The Spray |
Good idea withn the locker door.
Your website says that you can access salt water from the galley sink. How did you plumb that, or is one of your tanks filled with salt water and, if so, why? Did you replace the head? Did you replace the settee tank itself? How is your bulkhead fixed to the fiberglass? Is it simply constructed of marine plywood, or did you glass over the whole thing? I am planning to do away with the dinette entirely, as I do not really use it anyway and the lack of floor space under the portside seat is maddening. I am planning to make a sofa pit out of that side with a conversion kit to turn the entire space into a bed (for me and wife and the kids up in the berth) Any experience with this arrangement? Have you covered the glass ceiling and walls with any sort of fabric at all? BTW, you have a fine looking vessel. have you sailed it far? I have done Duluth to Quebec in two years. I plan a complete tour of the Great Lakes this summer and a Trans-A the following summer Cleveland to Cleveland, England. dave "Capt. Neal®" wrote in message ... Sorry I did not answer your post the first time, Dave. I thought you were a Bertie the Bunyip sock puppet. Have you visited my website? There are lots of pictures there that might help you with your conversions. http://captneal.homestead.com/index.html Just follow the links to the interior where you will see all the modifications I have made. I raised the dinette and put a fill in the water tank on the side of the raised area. I also put another 18-gallon water tank under the center of the cockpit between the two large stringers. I used hand pumps for water both in the head and the galley and have put tubing with a tee and a valve so I can draw water from either tank from either sink. I put a cockpit fill (little perfections page) in for the under cockpit tank but still have to fill the settee tank from inside the vessel though it is on the side of the settee now so I don't have to move the cushion. I also got rid of the old, rotten wooden top for the tank and replaced it with plastic - Star Board. I got rid of the door to the head and reversed the hanging locker door so it would open against the mast post. It gives a bit of privacy for the head this way The swinging instrument board works well. I now have an outside depth sounder which makes the use of the board optional. I use a 9.9 Honda Four which powers the boat to hull speed at about half throttle in mild conditions. It gets great gas mileage and is very quiet. It is on the transom in the factory cut-out. Feel free to ask more questions here as there are many more people here who could profit from discussing boats for once. CN "Sailing Dave" wrote in message rver.com... As I understand it from this newsgroup, you have an identical coronado to mine, except, I think you have a shoal keel and I do not. Apart from this difference, I believe they are more or less identical, though i suspectthat you have updated your interior as your's is a live aboard vessel. I am currently in the middle of a refit and would appreciate your advice. My first concern is the actual eorking infrastructure, I need to replace or repair the water tank and the water fixtures. Is your tank (or was it originally) only fillable from inside the boat under the aft seat? if so, did you refit this item? Did you replace your water fixtures in the head and galley? if so, how did you pulmb them? Did you fit a sea-water pump, if so, how is it plumbed to the outside? I am getting rid of the door on the head and building a nav station above the port side galley. Any advice? I am fitting my nav instruments on a swinging peice of teak that will be able to swing into the companionway while underway. How are your instruments fit? Do you have an outboard, or one of Coronado's old saildrive motors. What is your maximum speed underway with motor only? So many questions, so little space. Sailing Dave - The Storm and The Spray |
What sort of weather have you weathered with the Mustard? largest seas I
have seen was 14 footers on Erie and 45 knot winds. The boat didn't mind as much as I did. I truly didn't think we were coming back. The engine was a joke and the waves pounded us without mercy. Took on water to the top of the settee seats. BAD TIME. "Capt. Neal®" wrote in message ... Sorry I did not answer your post the first time, Dave. I thought you were a Bertie the Bunyip sock puppet. Have you visited my website? There are lots of pictures there that might help you with your conversions. http://captneal.homestead.com/index.html Just follow the links to the interior where you will see all the modifications I have made. I raised the dinette and put a fill in the water tank on the side of the raised area. I also put another 18-gallon water tank under the center of the cockpit between the two large stringers. I used hand pumps for water both in the head and the galley and have put tubing with a tee and a valve so I can draw water from either tank from either sink. I put a cockpit fill (little perfections page) in for the under cockpit tank but still have to fill the settee tank from inside the vessel though it is on the side of the settee now so I don't have to move the cushion. I also got rid of the old, rotten wooden top for the tank and replaced it with plastic - Star Board. I got rid of the door to the head and reversed the hanging locker door so it would open against the mast post. It gives a bit of privacy for the head this way The swinging instrument board works well. I now have an outside depth sounder which makes the use of the board optional. I use a 9.9 Honda Four which powers the boat to hull speed at about half throttle in mild conditions. It gets great gas mileage and is very quiet. It is on the transom in the factory cut-out. Feel free to ask more questions here as there are many more people here who could profit from discussing boats for once. CN "Sailing Dave" wrote in message rver.com... As I understand it from this newsgroup, you have an identical coronado to mine, except, I think you have a shoal keel and I do not. Apart from this difference, I believe they are more or less identical, though i suspectthat you have updated your interior as your's is a live aboard vessel. I am currently in the middle of a refit and would appreciate your advice. My first concern is the actual eorking infrastructure, I need to replace or repair the water tank and the water fixtures. Is your tank (or was it originally) only fillable from inside the boat under the aft seat? if so, did you refit this item? Did you replace your water fixtures in the head and galley? if so, how did you pulmb them? Did you fit a sea-water pump, if so, how is it plumbed to the outside? I am getting rid of the door on the head and building a nav station above the port side galley. Any advice? I am fitting my nav instruments on a swinging peice of teak that will be able to swing into the companionway while underway. How are your instruments fit? Do you have an outboard, or one of Coronado's old saildrive motors. What is your maximum speed underway with motor only? So many questions, so little space. Sailing Dave - The Storm and The Spray |
What sort of weather have you weathered with the Mustard? largest seas I
have seen was 14 footers on Erie and 45 knot winds. The boat didn't mind as much as I did. I truly didn't think we were coming back. The engine was a joke and the waves pounded us without mercy. Took on water to the top of the settee seats. BAD TIME. "Sailing Dave" wrote in message rver.com... Good idea withn the locker door. Your website says that you can access salt water from the galley sink. How did you plumb that, or is one of your tanks filled with salt water and, if so, why? Did you replace the head? Did you replace the settee tank itself? How is your bulkhead fixed to the fiberglass? Is it simply constructed of marine plywood, or did you glass over the whole thing? I am planning to do away with the dinette entirely, as I do not really use it anyway and the lack of floor space under the portside seat is maddening. I am planning to make a sofa pit out of that side with a conversion kit to turn the entire space into a bed (for me and wife and the kids up in the berth) Any experience with this arrangement? Have you covered the glass ceiling and walls with any sort of fabric at all? BTW, you have a fine looking vessel. have you sailed it far? I have done Duluth to Quebec in two years. I plan a complete tour of the Great Lakes this summer and a Trans-A the following summer Cleveland to Cleveland, England. dave "Capt. Neal®" wrote in message ... Sorry I did not answer your post the first time, Dave. I thought you were a Bertie the Bunyip sock puppet. Have you visited my website? There are lots of pictures there that might help you with your conversions. http://captneal.homestead.com/index.html Just follow the links to the interior where you will see all the modifications I have made. I raised the dinette and put a fill in the water tank on the side of the raised area. I also put another 18-gallon water tank under the center of the cockpit between the two large stringers. I used hand pumps for water both in the head and the galley and have put tubing with a tee and a valve so I can draw water from either tank from either sink. I put a cockpit fill (little perfections page) in for the under cockpit tank but still have to fill the settee tank from inside the vessel though it is on the side of the settee now so I don't have to move the cushion. I also got rid of the old, rotten wooden top for the tank and replaced it with plastic - Star Board. I got rid of the door to the head and reversed the hanging locker door so it would open against the mast post. It gives a bit of privacy for the head this way The swinging instrument board works well. I now have an outside depth sounder which makes the use of the board optional. I use a 9.9 Honda Four which powers the boat to hull speed at about half throttle in mild conditions. It gets great gas mileage and is very quiet. It is on the transom in the factory cut-out. Feel free to ask more questions here as there are many more people here who could profit from discussing boats for once. CN "Sailing Dave" wrote in message rver.com... As I understand it from this newsgroup, you have an identical coronado to mine, except, I think you have a shoal keel and I do not. Apart from this difference, I believe they are more or less identical, though i suspectthat you have updated your interior as your's is a live aboard vessel. I am currently in the middle of a refit and would appreciate your advice. My first concern is the actual eorking infrastructure, I need to replace or repair the water tank and the water fixtures. Is your tank (or was it originally) only fillable from inside the boat under the aft seat? if so, did you refit this item? Did you replace your water fixtures in the head and galley? if so, how did you pulmb them? Did you fit a sea-water pump, if so, how is it plumbed to the outside? I am getting rid of the door on the head and building a nav station above the port side galley. Any advice? I am fitting my nav instruments on a swinging peice of teak that will be able to swing into the companionway while underway. How are your instruments fit? Do you have an outboard, or one of Coronado's old saildrive motors. What is your maximum speed underway with motor only? So many questions, so little space. Sailing Dave - The Storm and The Spray |
"Sailing Dave" wrote in message rver.com... Good idea withn the locker door. Your website says that you can access salt water from the galley sink. How did you plumb that, or is one of your tanks filled with salt water and, if so, why? I put in a 3/4 inch thru-hull in the bottom of the sink locker and have one of those Whale Galley gusher foot pumps to a spigot near the hand pump. The foot pump actuator arm is under the bottom companion step. Did you replace the head? No, it still has the original head which I rarely use preferring the cedar bucket method. Did you replace the settee tank itself? No, it is GPR and part of the settee structure. How is your bulkhead fixed to the fiberglass? Is it simply constructed of marine plywood, or did you glass over the whole thing? It is marine ply with glossy color-matched formica glued on with rubber cement. Edges sealed with 5200 against moisture intrusion and rot. Bulkhead glued in place with 5200 and no mechanical fasteners. I am planning to do away with the dinette entirely, as I do not really use it anyway and the lack of floor space under the portside seat is maddening. I am planning to make a sofa pit out of that side with a conversion kit to turn the entire space into a bed (for me and wife and the kids up in the berth) Any experience with this arrangement? That's how it used to work when the dinette table was lowered onto the settees. This would be easy to do by just lowering the table into the grooves in the settees and making some comfy cushions. Have you covered the glass ceiling and walls with any sort of fabric at all? Only on what is usually called the ceiling (sides) and I glued carpet there to minimize sweating as it is not cored in the sides as it is on the overhead. BTW, you have a fine looking vessel. have you sailed it far? I have done Duluth to Quebec in two years. I plan a complete tour of the Great Lakes this summer and a Trans-A the following summer Cleveland to Cleveland, England. Yes, we both have fine vessels and they are very seaworthy. I have sailed mine thousands of miles and have lived aboard for over fifteen years now. Haven't done a crossing with her yet but may get a wild hair up my arse one of these days and do so. Coronado 27s are pretty stout. CN |
I've been in some very large seas in the Gulf Stream in several occasions.
Fifteen feet for sure. There have been times when in the tough I could not see a very large ship a half mile or so off. Had blue water slop into the cockpit from time to time. Never had a control problem as I have a variety of sails and use them properly for the wind conditions. Unlike most of the wimps around here, I am not afraid to go forward to change a headsail when necessary no matter the conditions. Never had any water in the interior. I keep the bottom washboard in the companionway when offshore and it goes halfway up the opening. It is gasketed and watertight even if the cockpit should fill which it never has. She used to pound somewhat -hull flexing and hitting interior accommodation component. Since I poured flotation foam between the hull and liner from bow to companionway she has become quiet even when pounding into a steep chop and any oil-canning has been eliminated. She's like a Boston Whaler now. CN "Sailing Dave" wrote in message rver.com... What sort of weather have you weathered with the Mustard? largest seas I have seen was 14 footers on Erie and 45 knot winds. The boat didn't mind as much as I did. I truly didn't think we were coming back. The engine was a joke and the waves pounded us without mercy. Took on water to the top of the settee seats. BAD TIME. "Capt. Neal®" wrote in message ... Sorry I did not answer your post the first time, Dave. I thought you were a Bertie the Bunyip sock puppet. Have you visited my website? There are lots of pictures there that might help you with your conversions. http://captneal.homestead.com/index.html Just follow the links to the interior where you will see all the modifications I have made. I raised the dinette and put a fill in the water tank on the side of the raised area. I also put another 18-gallon water tank under the center of the cockpit between the two large stringers. I used hand pumps for water both in the head and the galley and have put tubing with a tee and a valve so I can draw water from either tank from either sink. I put a cockpit fill (little perfections page) in for the under cockpit tank but still have to fill the settee tank from inside the vessel though it is on the side of the settee now so I don't have to move the cushion. I also got rid of the old, rotten wooden top for the tank and replaced it with plastic - Star Board. I got rid of the door to the head and reversed the hanging locker door so it would open against the mast post. It gives a bit of privacy for the head this way The swinging instrument board works well. I now have an outside depth sounder which makes the use of the board optional. I use a 9.9 Honda Four which powers the boat to hull speed at about half throttle in mild conditions. It gets great gas mileage and is very quiet. It is on the transom in the factory cut-out. Feel free to ask more questions here as there are many more people here who could profit from discussing boats for once. CN "Sailing Dave" wrote in message rver.com... As I understand it from this newsgroup, you have an identical coronado to mine, except, I think you have a shoal keel and I do not. Apart from this difference, I believe they are more or less identical, though i suspectthat you have updated your interior as your's is a live aboard vessel. I am currently in the middle of a refit and would appreciate your advice. My first concern is the actual eorking infrastructure, I need to replace or repair the water tank and the water fixtures. Is your tank (or was it originally) only fillable from inside the boat under the aft seat? if so, did you refit this item? Did you replace your water fixtures in the head and galley? if so, how did you pulmb them? Did you fit a sea-water pump, if so, how is it plumbed to the outside? I am getting rid of the door on the head and building a nav station above the port side galley. Any advice? I am fitting my nav instruments on a swinging peice of teak that will be able to swing into the companionway while underway. How are your instruments fit? Do you have an outboard, or one of Coronado's old saildrive motors. What is your maximum speed underway with motor only? So many questions, so little space. Sailing Dave - The Storm and The Spray |
Neal is certainly the right person to ask about this. While he's generally a
**** person, he knows a heck of a lot about his Coronado. -- "j" ganz @@ www.sailnow.com "Sailing Dave" wrote in message rver.com... As I understand it from this newsgroup, you have an identical coronado to mine, except, I think you have a shoal keel and I do not. Apart from this difference, I believe they are more or less identical, though i suspectthat you have updated your interior as your's is a live aboard vessel. I am currently in the middle of a refit and would appreciate your advice. My first concern is the actual eorking infrastructure, I need to replace or repair the water tank and the water fixtures. Is your tank (or was it originally) only fillable from inside the boat under the aft seat? if so, did you refit this item? Did you replace your water fixtures in the head and galley? if so, how did you pulmb them? Did you fit a sea-water pump, if so, how is it plumbed to the outside? I am getting rid of the door on the head and building a nav station above the port side galley. Any advice? I am fitting my nav instruments on a swinging peice of teak that will be able to swing into the companionway while underway. How are your instruments fit? Do you have an outboard, or one of Coronado's old saildrive motors. What is your maximum speed underway with motor only? So many questions, so little space. Sailing Dave - The Storm and The Spray |
"Sailing Dave" wrote in message I plan a complete tour of the Great Lakes this summer and a Trans-A the following summer Cleveland to Cleveland, England. A Trans Atlantic in a Coronado 27?????? BWAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAHAAAAAA Good Luck! CM |
"Sailing Dave" wrote in message rver.com... What sort of weather have you weathered with the Mustard? largest seas I have seen was 14 footers on Erie and 45 knot winds. The boat didn't mind as much as I did. I truly didn't think we were coming back. The engine was a joke and the waves pounded us without mercy. Took on water to the top of the settee seats. BAD TIME. If that's all it took... I'd seriously reconsider the Atlantic Crossing!! CM |
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