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#1
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I am considering purchasing a Catalina 30 1982, atomic 4
I would appreciate any information regarding design or old age problems to watch out for The boat has always been in salt water and if purchased will go to fresh and will be sailing the great lakes Any and all information is greatly appreciated |
#2
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Barry,
It's hard to go wrong with that boat. Here's a photo of the one we used ot have as we crossed the Mexican border on the '99 Ha Ha http://rangerbest.home.comcast.net/sc-600-400.JPG Ours had a tiller, which if you can find one, I would reccommend as it really opens up the cockpit and auto-steers well with just an inexpensive tiller pilot. Ours had end boom sheeting. I would reccommend mid boom sheeting, but it wasn't important enough to make it to the top of the project list while we had ours. It makes a great day sailor and a good coastal cruiser. The longest trip we ever did entailed living on the boat non-stop for two months from SF Bay down around the tip of Baja and up into the Sea Of Cortez. Had a great time, but it was "cozy" with 4-5 people aboard (dropped one off at Cabo San Lucas) for this long. Pluses: - A very successful, well tested design made for 25 years or something like that. - An active listserver on sailnet with hundreds of members (a great resource). - The A4 has it's own listserver on sailnet. - Very easy to sail, After running the lines aft, I used to single hand ours easily. - Reasonable performance. - Easy to resell when the time comes. - Very little exposed wood means easy maintainence. - A4 is easy to understand and work on (kinda like a 60's era VW engine). - Can be trimmed so the helm is balanced and very light even in high winds. - Turns on a dime. - Great cockpit for entertaining. Negatives: - V-berth is kinda narrow at the pointy end when two are sleeping in it. - Minimal fuel and water tankage for really long trips. - Minimal storage for really long trips. Hope this helps - Dan barry kay wrote: I am considering purchasing a Catalina 30 1982, atomic 4 I would appreciate any information regarding design or old age problems to watch out for The boat has always been in salt water and if purchased will go to fresh and will be sailing the great lakes Any and all information is greatly appreciated -- Dan Best - (707) 431-1662, Healdsburg, CA 95448 B-2/75 1977-1979 Tayana 37 #192, "Tricia Jean" http://rangerbest.home.comcast.net/TriciaJean.JPG |
#3
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On Wed, 03 Sep 2003 14:59:12 GMT, "Daniel E. Best"
wrote: Barry, It's hard to go wrong with that boat. Here's a photo of the one we used ot have as we crossed the Mexican border on the '99 Ha Ha http://rangerbest.home.comcast.net/sc-600-400.JPG Ours had a tiller, which if you can find one, I would reccommend as it really opens up the cockpit and auto-steers well with just an inexpensive tiller pilot. Ours had end boom sheeting. I would reccommend mid boom sheeting, but it wasn't important enough to make it to the top of the project list while we had ours. It makes a great day sailor and a good coastal cruiser. The longest trip we ever did entailed living on the boat non-stop for two months from SF Bay down around the tip of Baja and up into the Sea Of Cortez. Had a great time, but it was "cozy" with 4-5 people aboard (dropped one off at Cabo San Lucas) for this long. Pluses: - A very successful, well tested design made for 25 years or something like that. - An active listserver on sailnet with hundreds of members (a great resource). - The A4 has it's own listserver on sailnet. - Very easy to sail, After running the lines aft, I used to single hand ours easily. - Reasonable performance. - Easy to resell when the time comes. - Very little exposed wood means easy maintainence. - A4 is easy to understand and work on (kinda like a 60's era VW engine). - Can be trimmed so the helm is balanced and very light even in high winds. - Turns on a dime. - Great cockpit for entertaining. Negatives: - V-berth is kinda narrow at the pointy end when two are sleeping in it. - Minimal fuel and water tankage for really long trips. - Minimal storage for really long trips. Hope this helps - Dan This guy knows his stuff: the Catalina 30 is a top Great Lakes/coastal boat, although with that giant companionway I wouldn't run before heavy weather. Lots of them on the Great Lakes also race at a PHRF of around 190-200, I think. One comment on the A4: go for freshwater cooling. Unless the seawater was flushed from the block occasionally, strainers employed and the proper 140 F thermostat used, there is likely salt precipitates in the cooling passages. A Marsolve flush followed by the installation of fresh water cooling and a higher temp thermostat will keep that A4 happy. Of course, in the Great Lakes, most A4 users already have raw water (direct lake water) cooling and the hotter T-stat (higher cooling temps make for better combustion as long as it's below 190-200F). So you could just do a through soak and rinse of the passages, get the goo out, and continue to cool via a thru-hull. R. |
#5
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Best way to ruin an old Atomic-4 is to flush it with muriatic acid.
An A4 that old is probably somewhere near the end of its life due to internal corrosion. Use a non-acidic descaler such as Marsolve or Rydlyme ... it wont disolve the base metal. How to check if the engine has enough 'meat' left in the block to be worth bothering about: either you or the surveyor/mechanic remove a single (or more) exhaust manifold bolt, then go in with a dental pick and count the number of threads remaining in the block. If you can count at least four threads in one of the exhaust manifold attachment bolt bore holes, then the engine has not rotted awawy internally and has sufficient 'meat' left. To prolong life, seriously consider to add freshwater cooling, even in fresh water. With fresh water cooling, the engine 'cooling loop' will contain antifreeze with its associated 'anti-corrosion' compounds, etc. The important thing here is that you will never (when winterizing) have to drain the coolant (other than the raw water side). Draining and letting an A4 'air-dry' internally will promote HUGE chunks of rust platlettes to break off, which will eventually clog the exhaust manifold and engine internals ... keep it WET and dont let it dry out internally - for long life. |
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