Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
|
#1
![]()
posted to rec.boats.cruising
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Feb 24, 1:09 pm, "NE Sailboat" wrote:
It is almost spring .. and I am thinking of a grill. What grill, and what model and what mount and why .. etc. Tally ho I agree with Skip about the portable grill from Lowe's. Half the price of a Magma and those other "marine" grills. You will have to design a mounting system for it, but that really is very simple--a 30 minute job. We use ours frequently for meat, fish, toast and baking french bread. Never blows out. Peter s/v Now or Never! |
#2
![]()
posted to rec.boats.cruising
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Peter ... so far I am figuring that the Lowe's idea is the way to go..
Now, what Lowe's model did you buy? Are you talking a round grill, a square grill, etc. what kind? Once I have the grill .. I am thinking the model must be one small enough to sit on a table .. right? I haven't gone to Lowe's yet so if you could be more specific on the attachment system? What did you use for the attachment? What parts? Where did you get the parts? More info if you can? ============== "Peter" wrote in message oups.com... On Feb 24, 1:09 pm, "NE Sailboat" wrote: It is almost spring .. and I am thinking of a grill. What grill, and what model and what mount and why .. etc. Tally ho I agree with Skip about the portable grill from Lowe's. Half the price of a Magma and those other "marine" grills. You will have to design a mounting system for it, but that really is very simple--a 30 minute job. We use ours frequently for meat, fish, toast and baking french bread. Never blows out. Peter s/v Now or Never! |
#3
![]()
posted to rec.boats.cruising
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Feb 25, 10:30 am, "NE Sailboat" wrote:
Peter ... so far I am figuring that the Lowe's idea is the way to go.. Now, what Lowe's model did you buy? Are you talking a round grill, a square grill, etc. what kind? Once I have the grill .. I am thinking the model must be one small enough to sit on a table .. right? I haven't gone to Lowe's yet so if you could be more specific on the attachment system? What did you use for the attachment? What parts? Where did you get the parts? More info if you can? =============="Peter" wrote in message oups.com... On Feb 24, 1:09 pm, "NE Sailboat" wrote: It is almost spring .. and I am thinking of a grill. What grill, and what model and what mount and why .. etc. Tally ho I agree with Skip about the portable grill from Lowe's. Half the price of a Magma and those other "marine" grills. You will have to design a mounting system for it, but that really is very simple--a 30 minute job. We use ours frequently for meat, fish, toast and baking french bread. Never blows out. Peter s/v Now or Never! http://justpickone.org/skip/gallery/..._Work&start=78 That starts the installation sequence on the grill we bought. Sorry to hit and run, but I have to go fuel and get gone... L8R Skip |
#4
![]()
posted to rec.boats.cruising
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Tom,
Our grill is a "BBQ Grillware" Same as Skip's--he and I corresponded about it some months ago. We bought it at Lowe's for about $75. Skip indicates he paid $98 for the grill. Maybe mine was on sale. It is stainless steel, rectangular, measures about 12"X20". I attached 2 spring clips to the rear bottom of the grill that I clip on to the stern rail. I drilled holes in the ends of the spring clips so I could put hairpin clips to secure them to the rail. Spring clips are commonly used to hold poles or rods of various kinds to walls, ceilings, etc. Available in stainless at Lowes in their limited boating supplies display. I have attached a strut to the front center bottom of the grill that is also attached to the bottom of a stanchion. This part can simply be a piece of flat stock long enough to reach from the bottom of the grill to the bottom of a stanchion, you could use an angle of some kind to attach it to the grill and maybe a hose clamp along with a bolt to hold the bottom of the strut to the stanchion. My strut is made from a piece of stainless tubing because that's what I had available. This provides 3 points of support. If you can't mount the grill over a stanchion, you could run the strut down to some point on the coaming. Basically, you want to attach the grill to the rail and support the front of the grill to keep it from swinging down. We have left the grill in position in fairly rough seas with no mishap. According to Skip's pix, he adapted Magma mounting hardware to mount his. Skip says his mounting system cost $60 some odd. Mine cost less than $15. It's probably not as elegant or professional as his and perhaps a bit less convenient. I will try to take pix tomorrow and post somewhere. Peter s/v Now or Never! |
#5
![]()
posted to rec.boats.cruising
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Peter ,, thanks for the info. I went to Lowes yesterday. And, I looked at
the grill you bought. I was holding it upside down, etc and along comes the salesclerk. She looks at me like I am a NUT. Then I told her I was looking to use it on my boat. So,,, then the both of us are holding it upside down etc. It is a good one .. no doubt about that. But ... it won't work on my boat because I don't have enough room. I need a smaller grill. I will probably buy a Magma 2. That is if I can find one cheap on ebay. Thanks for taking the time to write. I'm sure someone else here will use your info for "their" new grill. That is why we lurk ... knowledge and fraternity. ================= "Peter" wrote in message oups.com... Tom, Our grill is a "BBQ Grillware" Same as Skip's--he and I corresponded about it some months ago. We bought it at Lowe's for about $75. Skip indicates he paid $98 for the grill. Maybe mine was on sale. It is stainless steel, rectangular, measures about 12"X20". I attached 2 spring clips to the rear bottom of the grill that I clip on to the stern rail. I drilled holes in the ends of the spring clips so I could put hairpin clips to secure them to the rail. Spring clips are commonly used to hold poles or rods of various kinds to walls, ceilings, etc. Available in stainless at Lowes in their limited boating supplies display. I have attached a strut to the front center bottom of the grill that is also attached to the bottom of a stanchion. This part can simply be a piece of flat stock long enough to reach from the bottom of the grill to the bottom of a stanchion, you could use an angle of some kind to attach it to the grill and maybe a hose clamp along with a bolt to hold the bottom of the strut to the stanchion. My strut is made from a piece of stainless tubing because that's what I had available. This provides 3 points of support. If you can't mount the grill over a stanchion, you could run the strut down to some point on the coaming. Basically, you want to attach the grill to the rail and support the front of the grill to keep it from swinging down. We have left the grill in position in fairly rough seas with no mishap. According to Skip's pix, he adapted Magma mounting hardware to mount his. Skip says his mounting system cost $60 some odd. Mine cost less than $15. It's probably not as elegant or professional as his and perhaps a bit less convenient. I will try to take pix tomorrow and post somewhere. Peter s/v Now or Never! |
#6
![]()
posted to rec.boats.cruising
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Feb 26, 4:31 am, "NE Sailboat" wrote:
grill. That is why we lurk ... knowledge and fraternity. ================="Peter" wrote in message My dear lurking reader: I am not certain the type or size of your boat. However, I want you to consider very seriously about having a "Bar-B-Q" bolted to a 1" rail on your boat. They look wonderful in thoes glossy WM pages. Everyone smiling, laughing with an expensive glass of wine in one hand all cozy in the cockpit of a sailboat. Ask a fire fighter why thoes things are a hazard. Or you could ask my friend Mark. He had one. Could not get his propane tank one filled one weekend so he used one of those qt. spin-on cans. He cooked away and ran out of gas. Screwed the empty one off but the valve stuck open spraying the gass everywhere. An ignition source did the rest. Poof!. Mark was left with 10% third degree burns to face-neck-chest. I have two other boat grill stories if you want. neiter as serious but...... close! Think buring kids...... Flames on boats................ Bad! You want to burn a bird or some beef. Do it on the dock or the beech. Flames on boat bad! BOb |
#7
![]()
posted to rec.boats.cruising
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Bob wrote:
On Feb 26, 4:31 am, "NE Sailboat" wrote: grill. That is why we lurk ... knowledge and fraternity. ================="Peter" wrote in message My dear lurking reader: I am not certain the type or size of your boat. However, I want you to consider very seriously about having a "Bar-B-Q" bolted to a 1" rail on your boat. They look wonderful in thoes glossy WM pages. Everyone smiling, laughing with an expensive glass of wine in one hand all cozy in the cockpit of a sailboat. Ask a fire fighter why thoes things are a hazard. Or you could ask my friend Mark. He had one. Could not get his propane tank one filled one weekend so he used one of those qt. spin-on cans. He cooked away and ran out of gas. Screwed the empty one off but the valve stuck open spraying the gass everywhere. An ignition source did the rest. Poof!. Mark was left with 10% third degree burns to face-neck-chest. I have two other boat grill stories if you want. neiter as serious but...... close! Think buring kids...... Flames on boats................ Bad! You want to burn a bird or some beef. Do it on the dock or the beech. Flames on boat bad! BOb shouldn't that be beach? |
#8
![]()
posted to rec.boats.cruising
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Bob" wrote in message oups.com... On Feb 26, 4:31 am, "NE Sailboat" wrote: grill. That is why we lurk ... knowledge and fraternity. ================="Peter" wrote in message My dear lurking reader: I am not certain the type or size of your boat. However, I want you to consider very seriously about having a "Bar-B-Q" bolted to a 1" rail on your boat. They look wonderful in thoes glossy WM pages. Everyone smiling, laughing with an expensive glass of wine in one hand all cozy in the cockpit of a sailboat. Ask a fire fighter why thoes things are a hazard. Or you could ask my friend Mark. He had one. Could not get his propane tank one filled one weekend so he used one of those qt. spin-on cans. He cooked away and ran out of gas. Screwed the empty one off but the valve stuck open spraying the gass everywhere. An ignition source did the rest. Poof!. Mark was left with 10% third degree burns to face-neck-chest. I have two other boat grill stories if you want. neiter as serious but...... close! Think buring kids...... Flames on boats................ Bad! You want to burn a bird or some beef. Do it on the dock or the beech. Flames on boat bad! BOb ================================================== == Bob ,, I've had a grill on two other boats and had no problems. Not propane though. Charcoal grill that swung out over the water. Do you think the charcoal grills are safer? I have one on my sailboat and when I use it, I swing it out away from the hull. Are you saying that "any" grill is dangerous, or is it the propane that is the danger? |
#9
![]()
posted to rec.boats.cruising
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Feb 26, 2:52 pm, "NE Sailboat" wrote:
Flames on boats................ Bad! BOb Bob ,, I've had a grill on two other boats and had no problems. Not propane though. Charcoal grill that swung out over the water. Do you think the charcoal grills are safer? I have one on my sailboat and when I use it, I swing it out away from the hull. Are you saying that "any" grill is dangerous, or is it the propane that is the danger? Hi: Excellent percepton check. is it the gass or any grill........ There are many ways to get people about on the water. Just depends on your philosophy and what a person hopes to accomplish. The great debate at alt,sailing .asa is how to attach anchor chain to the boat. Of course the thread wondered to anchors and anchoring. Every body had extreamly strong opinions on the "proper" equipment and methods. The intersting thing is that non of the idiots ever stoped to ask: what type of boat, size, loction etc. They just started blabing opinions. The same holds true here. What size boat, what kind of sailing/ motoring, where, who else on board etc. One of the more safe grills I stood next to was the clasic GOM (Gulf Of Mexico) deck grill: 55 gallon drum welded to 1/4" angle iron that was welded to the deck of 220' OSV. But even that caused injury when the boat rolled underway and the cook fell into it. Burnt both palms badly. Off to the beach he went leaving his finger prints behind. THis is how I think about grills and boats...... go and buy the grill of your dreams. Put it in the back of the mini van. Add 2-3 half drunk adults, and a dog. Oh, you dont have one??? What about the guy a few slips down. You know, the big friendly type that all owners say " dont worry he would never hurt anybody" and then the mut jumps up knocking **** all over the place. I lost a set of Snap-On wrenches over the side by a friendly mut that way. Back to the mini van anology. Now dont forget the 2-3 kids. Now go for a drive down the road at 60 mph. Sound pretty rediculous, no? Then why do the same thing on a cramped boat (anything less than 60') that moves especically when that other idiot goes zooming by leaving a wake large enough to surf. My personal opinion is too many "accedents" can happen. Ever see the movie titled "Final Destination 2"? Take it to the beach. Do it on the dock. When the dog knocks it over no big deal. Grills are great......in the back yard next to the lawn mower. Flames on boat bad. Bob |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Magna Grill Problem/Advice | General | |||
our grill | ASA | |||
Free Grill! | General | |||
Free Grill | General |