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The Dana 24
Steve wrote: After looking at many, many pocket cruisers, examining my needs once again and listening to some rock solid advice given here, I've decided the best cruiser for me is the Dana 24: http://www.pacificseacraft.com/dana24.htm Nice boat. But I don't recall anyvbody here advising you to get one. Seems to me you asked about "trailerable" boats, which the Dana 24 is not (unless you define the term very loosely). ..... What are the advatanges and disadvantages of the cutter rig? Advantage: comes with a staysail already rigged. Disadvantage: the staysail is too low & too far forward for best usage as a storm sail. Added windage. Added complexity. Reduced efficiency sailing to windward. Some folks will say that the cutter rig is stronger. And they're right, within the constraints of 1890s technology. In a modern small boat, there is really no sound engineering reason to choose a cutter over a sloop. Is it smart to use roller furlings for both sails? A matter of taste. Personally, I would not. The big outer jib could profitably be set on a roller furler, the smaller inner staysail is likely to be too small to need one, and the extra rigging will get underfoot. What is typical water usage per person per day? For survival, one pint. For non-survival, drinking only, about 3 pints (outside the tropics) For actual living, anywhere from 2 gallons (for good campers) on up. My wife & I use an average of about 10 gallons a day for the two of us, we're relatively careful to conserve but not skimpy. The average American uses about 25 gallons a day in the home (no doubt this average is driven up by watering the lawn & washing the car, but you get the idea). Will the extra water tank option change the balance of the boat? Yes Can I convert the water tank into a diesel tank? Yes. Converting it back may be a bit more of a problem. Does anyone here own one? Not that I know of. However I've had several friends who have owned them, and there's one in our marina now. Thanks in advance for all your knowledgeable help! You're welcome. Steve Dooley Are you related to Tom Dooley? Injun Ear (formerly known as Eagle Eye) |
The Dana 24
Steve Dooley wrote:
... I was thinking of a multiple battery system, 3 batteries with an isolator in between. Someone mentioned getting rid of the isolator and hooking the batteries in a delta configuration to increase the power output. I can't find any references on this, can someone help? Batteries are quite simple. A small dedicated starting battery, plus a large house bank, sized to handle at least two days' usage, the bigger the better. Allow for cross-connecting in a crisis. Hook all charge outputs directly to the house bank, feed the starter bat with an Echo-Charge (this means the strap between the alternator and starter solenoid should be broken). Isolators are a waste of energy, combiners mean the starter bank is overcharged. I have no idea how a "delta configuration" would apply to batteries (as opposed to motors or transformers). If I run an automatic water making system should I turn it off when discharging the head/holding tank? maybe. Steve Dooley (I do not even know who Tom Dooley is) Hang down your head! |
The Dana 24
Steve Dooley wrote in message ... Can I put a bladder inside the extra water tank so it is easy to convert between diesel and water storage? no need to. Water and diesel don't mix. Water is heavier than diesel. Just run your water lines off the bottom of the tank and your fuel lines from the top. SBV |
The Dana 24
Steve Dooley wrote:
On Fri, 15 Dec 2006 15:35:44 -0500, Jeff wrote: .... Batteries are quite simple. A small dedicated starting battery, plus a large house bank, sized to handle at least two days' usage, the bigger the better. Allow for cross-connecting in a crisis. Hook all charge outputs directly to the house bank, feed the starter bat with an Echo-Charge (this means the strap between the alternator and starter solenoid should be broken). Isolators are a waste of energy, combiners mean the starter bank is overcharged. I have no idea how a "delta configuration" would apply to batteries (as opposed to motors or transformers). If I run an automatic water making system should I turn it off when discharging the head/holding tank? maybe. Steve Dooley (I do not even know who Tom Dooley is) Hang down your head! What is the Echo-Charge strap connected to on the alternator and starter? It can't be the ground strap can it? What does breaking it do? Are you talking about hooking the alternator directly to the starter battery? I'm confused on this one. These are two separate issues. The EchoCharge can tie in on the hot side of the house bank, and thus is connected to all of the charge sources. Its output goes to the starter bat as its only charge source. This ensures that the starter bat get its appropriate (normally trickle) charge even if the house bank is receiving a voltage. The other issue is that most engines have a strap directly between the alternator and the solenoid, and on to the battery switch. In my setup (actually refer to Nigel Calder's book for this) you want the alternator to feed the house bank, and the solenoid fed by the starter battery. Thus, the strap must be removed. The way that most older boats are set up, the alternator/solenoid strap is at the "common" of the Big Red A/B switch. Current thinking is that the starter and the house system should be separate circuits. |
The Dana 24
Steve Dooley wrote
Can I put a bladder inside the extra water tank so it is easy to convert between diesel and water storage? Scotty wrote: no need to. Water and diesel don't mix. Water is heavier than diesel. Just run your water lines off the bottom of the tank and your fuel lines from the top. That's right, the Navy does it exactly like that. I'm not kidding, google up "compensated fuel/ballast tanks" although most of the hits will be in regard to ecologic impact of discharging ballast water from said tanks, you should be able to find something on the fuel side. signed- Eayyam A. Injun Ear (formerly known as Eagle Eye) |
The Dana 24
wrote in message
ps.com... Steve Dooley wrote Can I put a bladder inside the extra water tank so it is easy to convert between diesel and water storage? Scotty wrote: no need to. Water and diesel don't mix. Water is heavier than diesel. Just run your water lines off the bottom of the tank and your fuel lines from the top. That's right, the Navy does it exactly like that. I'm not kidding, google up "compensated fuel/ballast tanks" although most of the hits will be in regard to ecologic impact of discharging ballast water from said tanks, you should be able to find something on the fuel side. signed- Eayyam A. Injun Ear (formerly known as Eagle Eye) Yeah, but don't drink the water. -- jlrogers±³© |
The Dana 24
Isolators are a waste of energy, combiners mean the starter bank is
overcharged. Somewhat agreed, depends on the charge source & duration. A combiner is nice & simple, low voltage drop (more efficient). It doesn't necessarily mean that one or the other bank is going to be overcharged though. What is the Echo-Charge strap connected to on the alternator and starter? It can't be the ground strap can it? What does breaking it do? Are you talking about hooking the alternator directly to the starter battery? I'm confused on this one. Jeff wrote: These are two separate issues. The EchoCharge can tie in on the hot side of the house bank, and thus is connected to all of the charge sources. Its output goes to the starter bat as its only charge source. This ensures that the starter bat get its appropriate (normally trickle) charge even if the house bank is receiving a voltage. Your alternator has an echo charger? A combiner is generally used only on the alternator output, which is a shourt duration charge source and not likely to seriously overcharge the battery ...unless the voltage regulator is FU or the battery(s) are hot. A better charge regulator, external to the alternator (with temp compensation) is a very good upgrade. I have only seen echo chargers on 120V chargers; a better set-up available now is completely seperate regulation available on seperate legs. The other issue is that most engines have a strap directly between the alternator and the solenoid, and on to the battery switch. In my setup (actually refer to Nigel Calder's book for this) you want the alternator to feed the house bank, and the solenoid fed by the starter battery. Thus, the strap must be removed. The way that most older boats are set up, the alternator/solenoid strap is at the "common" of the Big Red A/B switch. Current thinking is that the starter and the house system should be separate circuits. Well, they should have been all along, but it's cheap and simple and it works for weekending (most of the time). signed- Injun Ear (formerly known as Eagle Eye) |
The Dana 24
"Charlie Morgan" wrote You'll note that Nellen immediately mentioned Western Estates when Steve showed up. I wonder why.... I thought everybody knew about Bobby and Steve Dooley and Western Estates. That Phil Hendrie was sooooo funny and a genius. But, just because people have the same names on the news groups it doesn't mean real people don't have the same names. Why are people around here so fascinated with names? Does it really matter? Hey, pay more attention to what people post and not who's posting it. Duh! Cheers, Ellen |
The Dana 24
That should fix his sorry ass, Scot.
If he is going to Trailer, why in the hell is it necessary to increase diesel storage? http://community.webtv.net/tassail/ILLDRINKTOTHAT |
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