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When I got my Tyler 29, the nav lights, among others, were wired with
juke box wire and wire nuts. The boat is / has been used in mainly fresh water. I decided to keep an eye on it, call it an empirical study. I made sure I had some wire and nuts available, and waited for it to sink the boat, so to speak. Portents abound, prophets wail, but they remain out in the wilderness, unfulfilled, with no light save my nav lights, for 9 years that I know of, and who knows how long before I got the boat. Doom and gloom forcast nowithstanding, I wait, prepared for catastrophe. I give them a wiggle every spring to see if their nuts will fall off. Not yet. The now blackened copper visible has oxidised as much as it will, like a copper penny, still trustworthy. It all makes me think there is a plot to keep non-millionaires off of the water, by any means, including terror tales, establishment regulations inspected and enforced or not, and who knows what I do not know. I did rewire the bilge pump, which has never seen "active service," as if waiting for the bombers in the tx hut isn't active enough. I can see if the nav lights are on or off, so will know immediately if another bulb gives out, or even if a wire disintegrates. I may install led lamps, and keep waiting to the inevitable wire nut disaster popularily forecasted. I said "fresh water," remember? And, I do not route wires where their ends are likely to get wet. If I do work for others, I work "to spec", for price or bling standard. Cobbler's shoes? Terry K |
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