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On Sat, 29 Nov 2008 16:35:11 -0800 (PST), Two meter troll
wrote: On Nov 29, 8:19*am, wrote: I dont get electrical surveys done at all, ever. there is not a used boat on earth that does not need all the electrical ripped out and replaced. Sure, there's lots of them. Of course, there's usually something at least slightly amiss but if you have ZERO TOLERANCE for stuff that doesn't always work perfectly, then sailing is not for you (unless you are a true masochist). Two meter troll wrote: some time in its past someone thought it would be good to put in a bilge alarm so they did a fantastic job of it drilling down the length of a bulkhead stud then grooving the back side of a frame and running the wires hidden with putty and paint all the way down to the lowest part of the bilge. That's lovely, not only a total **** job by DPO but he apparently took pains to hide his handiwork. I love to buy boats from people who have no clue that structural elements are there for a reason. In fact I have a few acquaintances who indulge in this sort of dumbassery, but I don't sail with them unless the trip is short & the weather is nice. ... where someone else decided it didnt need a bilge alarm and couldnt get the wire out so they just cut it off flush in that nice dry bilge. the boat gets a bit older and she tends to get a bit weepy from time to time that dry bilge gets a couple gallons of water in it and shorts things out. you would figure that this circut would be fused. *since its an alarm its wired directly into the main buss and you dont have time to check it when your bridge goes dead you check it when you are safe at the dock by which time the wires are all dry and the thing works again. you must have very fast-drying wiring. Anyway ripping out all wiring and starting over from scratch is a lot of work. If I planned to do that, I'd probably want the boat to be free of for the seller to pay me to take it. There's lots & lots of boats out there that aren't so bad.... maybe if you did a careful survey of the electrical system first, you'd get a fair warning in time to go look elsewhere.... * ![]() Fresh Breezes- Doug King na i liked the boat she was a gem just had a few quirks to work out. I have "zero tolerance" in some areas. one of which is electrons, the other of which is Hydraulics. i rip them out a replace them with systems i know are tight and will work the way they ought. i spend way to much time offshore to want the worry of those two systems going gunnysacks. rigging i can make, sails i can sew, engines i can rebuild normal plumbing i can fix but if it sparks or has high pressure leaks i want it good before i cast off. My perhaps irrelevant experience with farm and construction hydraulics is that most leaks can be fixed with a slight turn of a wrench, the notable exception is leaks around the piston rod, but one shouldn't take dubious stuff offshore. Or anywhere. As for wiring, in fifty years, nobody ever got any of the Turbocraft's wiring wet. Or screwed with it. So what would I know about problems with wiring ? Keeping the wires up to snuff is easy with a trouble free fresh water, lake type, runabout.and I count my blessings. No trouble whatever for fifty years. Working on wiring in a moving boat could be a nightmare. My hair is too long to crawl into tight places with a torch. My experience with working on boats is on the beach or the hoist. or the trailer. All rock steady. My workbench has a 4 inch thick oak top and weighs hundreds. German. Steady is good. Casady |
#2
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posted to rec.boats.cruising
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On Nov 29, 8:07*pm, (Richard Casady)
wrote: On Sat, 29 Nov 2008 16:35:11 -0800 (PST), Two meter troll wrote: On Nov 29, 8:19*am, wrote: I dont get electrical surveys done at all, ever. there is not a used boat on earth that does not need all the electrical ripped out and replaced. Sure, there's lots of them. Of course, there's usually something at least slightly amiss but if you have ZERO TOLERANCE for stuff that doesn't always work perfectly, then sailing is not for you (unless you are a true masochist). Two meter troll wrote: some time in its past someone thought it would be good to put in a bilge alarm so they did a fantastic job of it drilling down the length of a bulkhead stud then grooving the back side of a frame and running the wires hidden with putty and paint all the way down to the lowest part of the bilge. That's lovely, not only a total **** job by DPO but he apparently took pains to hide his handiwork. I love to buy boats from people who have no clue that structural elements are there for a reason. In fact I have a few acquaintances who indulge in this sort of dumbassery, but I don't sail with them unless the trip is short & the weather is nice. ... where someone else decided it didnt need a bilge alarm and couldnt get the wire out so they just cut it off flush in that nice dry bilge. the boat gets a bit older and she tends to get a bit weepy from time to time that dry bilge gets a couple gallons of water in it and shorts things out. you would figure that this circut would be fused. *since its an alarm its wired directly into the main buss and you dont have time to check it when your bridge goes dead you check it when you are safe at the dock by which time the wires are all dry and the thing works again. you must have very fast-drying wiring. Anyway ripping out all wiring and starting over from scratch is a lot of work. If I planned to do that, I'd probably want the boat to be free of for the seller to pay me to take it. There's lots & lots of boats out there that aren't so bad.... maybe if you did a careful survey of the electrical system first, you'd get a fair warning in time to go look elsewhere.... * ![]() Fresh Breezes- Doug King na i liked the boat she was a gem just had a few quirks to work out. I have "zero tolerance" in some areas. one of which is electrons, the other of which is Hydraulics. i rip them out a replace them with systems i know are tight and will work the way they ought. i spend way to much time offshore to want the worry of those two systems going gunnysacks. rigging i can make, sails i can sew, engines i can rebuild normal plumbing i can fix but if it sparks or has high pressure leaks i want it good before i cast off. My perhaps irrelevant experience with farm and construction hydraulics is that most leaks can be fixed with a slight turn of a wrench, the notable exception is leaks around the piston rod, but one shouldn't take dubious stuff offshore. Or anywhere. As for wiring, in fifty years, nobody ever got any of the Turbocraft's wiring wet. Or screwed with it. So what would I know about problems with wiring ? Keeping the wires up to snuff is easy with a trouble free fresh water, lake type, runabout.and I count my blessings. No trouble whatever for fifty years. Working on wiring in a moving boat could be a nightmare. My hair is too long to crawl into tight places with a torch. My experience with working on boats is on the beach or the hoist. or the trailer. All rock steady. My workbench has a 4 inch thick oak top and weighs hundreds. German. Steady is good. Casady- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - not irrelivent my experiance is super high low systems on arresting gear and the ******* systems on fishing boats. |
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