Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#21
![]()
posted to rec.boats
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
You need to get out of boating and stay in your metrosexual apartment,
with lots of creams, lotions, and hand sanitizer. |
#22
![]()
posted to rec.boats
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Feb 5, 8:31 pm, "
wrote: On Feb 5, 3:41 pm, "D-unit" wrote: wrote in message roups.com... I would like to know if there is a simple device for washing hand with fresh water. My boat is a 18-ft center console that is too small for adding a sink and faucet in it; moreover, a sink and faucet is overkill for my need. I will wash my hand in sal****er, and then use freshwater as the last step to wash away the sal****er from my hand. Therefore, I only need a small amount of fresh water. I have a feeling that one- gallon of freshwater should be more than enough for several persons use in a fishing trip. I would like to know a neat way to accomplish this. What I am looking for is something works like a garden hand-pump spray bottle. Then I can put the water tank under the floor, run a short lengh of water hose to the back of the boat and connecting to a small water faucet, somehow having a small hand pump next to the faucet. When I need to use it, all I need to do is pump it several times, turn on the faucet to let out a stream of water spray to wash the sal****er away from my hand (or wash the eyeglasses), let the water to run down to the floor and get air dried or drained to the scuppers. When I am done, I simply turn off the faucet. The next guy who wants to use it probably doesn't need to pump because there should still be enough water pressure in the system. Is there such a thing available in the market? Currently, I use a one-gal water bottle and pour over my hands. But this is not neat and is not elegant. Moreover, this tends to use more water than I really need. I have thought of using a store-bought large spring water tank that has a small faucet at the bottom and use gravity to dispense the water. But this requires me to put the water tank a couple feet above the floor. I would like to put the water tank under the floor to lower the center of gravity as much as possible (afterall it is a small boat). Thanks for any pointer in advance. Jay Chan Hmmm... Something like a pump sprayer might do the trick. You know the kind you get at the home center for around $15.00. Its not going to pump out loads of water but it might do the trick. You could modify the nozzle and make something work Im sure. Otherwise, Switch over to a 2-liter bottle and embrace squeeze technology to regulate the water pressure and add just a dash of hand soap to the mix. I even use hot water when its cold outside. Let us know how you make out. db- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Yes, I know the garden sprayer that you are referring to, and I have several of them for gardening and lawn care. Actually, that was how I get the idea of looking for something like that in a marine supply store. I have a feeling that this kind of device is so simple that it must cost very little and can be placed in any where we want. But so far I cannot find anything like that. I may have to mount a garden sprayer onto the boat like what you have suggested; but that can be ugly. Or I may get a low cost 12v electric pump that comes with a faucet in a kit, and be done with this. Sound like that is probably what I may end up doing. Jay Chan- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Well, you can do something like use a collapsable tank which I mentioned earlier. http://www.westmarine.com/webapp/wcs...0001/300/27/11 If you are going to put it under the floor board of your boat, this is probably the best option. Then with some plumbing adaptors, you could install a hand sprayer (pump in the handle) and there you have it. |
#23
![]()
posted to rec.boats
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Feb 5, 8:11 pm, "JoeSpareBedroom" wrote:
wrote in message ups.com... On Feb 5, 1:07 pm, "JoeSpareBedroom" wrote: wrote in message groups.com... I would like to know if there is a simple device for washing hand with fresh water. My boat is a 18-ft center console that is too small for adding a sink and faucet in it; moreover, a sink and faucet is overkill for my need. I will wash my hand in sal****er, and then use freshwater as the last step to wash away the sal****er from my hand. Therefore, I only need a small amount of fresh water. I have a feeling that one- gallon of freshwater should be more than enough for several persons use in a fishing trip. I would like to know a neat way to accomplish this. What I am looking for is something works like a garden hand-pump spray bottle. Then I can put the water tank under the floor, run a short lengh of water hose to the back of the boat and connecting to a small water faucet, somehow having a small hand pump next to the faucet. When I need to use it, all I need to do is pump it several times, turn on the faucet to let out a stream of water spray to wash the sal****er away from my hand (or wash the eyeglasses), let the water to run down to the floor and get air dried or drained to the scuppers. When I am done, I simply turn off the faucet. The next guy who wants to use it probably doesn't need to pump because there should still be enough water pressure in the system. Is there such a thing available in the market? Currently, I use a one-gal water bottle and pour over my hands. But this is not neat and is not elegant. Moreover, this tends to use more water than I really need. I have thought of using a store-bought large spring water tank that has a small faucet at the bottom and use gravity to dispense the water. But this requires me to put the water tank a couple feet above the floor. I would like to put the water tank under the floor to lower the center of gravity as much as possible (afterall it is a small boat). Thanks for any pointer in advance. Jay Chan You cannot be serious. Please tell me this is a joke.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Why is it a joke? I always carry a water bottle for washing the salt from my hands after I have washed my hand in sea water. This minimizes the irritation on my skin and helps keeping the skin problem down. Of course, I also use hand cream; this is a given. I guess not everyone has this skin problem; therefore, most people probably don't understand how this feels. Let's just say that this problem is physical, not mental. That water bottle works. But it is a bit too ad-hoc and tends to use more water than needed. That's the reason why I want to find something more convenient. Jay Chan Your own perspiration contains salt.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - I can understand his concern - I have a similar problem on board but related to infection as a result of my arthritis treatment. I'm more prone to infection as a result of that treatment and fresh water is much better to rinse with than salt - in particular in a harbor that has a sewer treatment near it. Or the CT River after rain which is full of...well this is a family group. What I do is carry a gallon of fresh water and use a hand sprayer - hence my advice to jay. Stick the gallon under the console and use it if I need to. |
#24
![]()
posted to rec.boats
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Feb 5, 4:41 pm, "Calif Bill" wrote:
wrote in message ups.com... On Feb 5, 12:33 pm, "Calif Bill" wrote: wrote in message groups.com... I would like to know if there is a simple device for washing hand with fresh water. My boat is a 18-ft center console that is too small for adding a sink and faucet in it; moreover, a sink and faucet is overkill for my need. I will wash my hand in sal****er, and then use freshwater as the last step to wash away the sal****er from my hand. Therefore, I only need a small amount of fresh water. I have a feeling that one- gallon of freshwater should be more than enough for several persons use in a fishing trip. I would like to know a neat way to accomplish this. What I am looking for is something works like a garden hand-pump spray bottle. Then I can put the water tank under the floor, run a short lengh of water hose to the back of the boat and connecting to a small water faucet, somehow having a small hand pump next to the faucet. When I need to use it, all I need to do is pump it several times, turn on the faucet to let out a stream of water spray to wash the sal****er away from my hand (or wash the eyeglasses), let the water to run down to the floor and get air dried or drained to the scuppers. When I am done, I simply turn off the faucet. The next guy who wants to use it probably doesn't need to pump because there should still be enough water pressure in the system. Is there such a thing available in the market? Currently, I use a one-gal water bottle and pour over my hands. But this is not neat and is not elegant. Moreover, this tends to use more water than I really need. I have thought of using a store-bought large spring water tank that has a small faucet at the bottom and use gravity to dispense the water. But this requires me to put the water tank a couple feet above the floor. I would like to put the water tank under the floor to lower the center of gravity as much as possible (afterall it is a small boat). Thanks for any pointer in advance. Jay Chan Why do you need to wash off the salt water all the time. Just pour a little fresh water from a drinking water bottle on the hands if you need to get the salt off. Sal****er will not hurt you. I wash off the bait juice all the time by dipping my hands in the ocean. Then use a towel to dry my hands.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - I use my pants leg. :) I wear shorts most of the year.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Pansy. Real men don't wear shorts. |
#25
![]()
posted to rec.boats
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Feb 5, 8:35 pm, "JoeSpareBedroom" wrote:
wrote in message oups.com... On Feb 5, 3:41 pm, "D-unit" wrote: wrote in message groups.com... I would like to know if there is a simple device for washing hand with fresh water. My boat is a 18-ft center console that is too small for adding a sink and faucet in it; moreover, a sink and faucet is overkill for my need. I will wash my hand in sal****er, and then use freshwater as the last step to wash away the sal****er from my hand. Therefore, I only need a small amount of fresh water. I have a feeling that one- gallon of freshwater should be more than enough for several persons use in a fishing trip. I would like to know a neat way to accomplish this. What I am looking for is something works like a garden hand-pump spray bottle. Then I can put the water tank under the floor, run a short lengh of water hose to the back of the boat and connecting to a small water faucet, somehow having a small hand pump next to the faucet. When I need to use it, all I need to do is pump it several times, turn on the faucet to let out a stream of water spray to wash the sal****er away from my hand (or wash the eyeglasses), let the water to run down to the floor and get air dried or drained to the scuppers. When I am done, I simply turn off the faucet. The next guy who wants to use it probably doesn't need to pump because there should still be enough water pressure in the system. Is there such a thing available in the market? Currently, I use a one-gal water bottle and pour over my hands. But this is not neat and is not elegant. Moreover, this tends to use more water than I really need. I have thought of using a store-bought large spring water tank that has a small faucet at the bottom and use gravity to dispense the water. But this requires me to put the water tank a couple feet above the floor. I would like to put the water tank under the floor to lower the center of gravity as much as possible (afterall it is a small boat). Thanks for any pointer in advance. Jay Chan Hmmm... Something like a pump sprayer might do the trick. You know the kind you get at the home center for around $15.00. Its not going to pump out loads of water but it might do the trick. You could modify the nozzle and make something work Im sure. Otherwise, Switch over to a 2-liter bottle and embrace squeeze technology to regulate the water pressure and add just a dash of hand soap to the mix. I even use hot water when its cold outside. Let us know how you make out. db- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Yes, I know the garden sprayer that you are referring to, and I have several of them for gardening and lawn care. Actually, that was how I get the idea of looking for something like that in a marine supply store. I have a feeling that this kind of device is so simple that it must cost very little and can be placed in any where we want. But so far I cannot find anything like that. I may have to mount a garden sprayer onto the boat like what you have suggested; but that can be ugly. Or I may get a low cost 12v electric pump that comes with a faucet in a kit, and be done with this. Sound like that is probably what I may end up doing. Jay Chan Buy the biggest bottles of drinking water you can find with the so-called "sport tops" for drinking. Drink the water. Fill with tap water at home. You're all set. Why are you making such a production out of this?- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Well, some people itch and twitch over hand cleaning, some people itch and twitch over water fountains in schools. It's all a matter of perspective. :) |
#26
![]()
posted to rec.boats
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Feb 6, 5:11 am, "Keith" wrote:
You need to get out of boating and stay in your metrosexual apartment, with lots of creams, lotions, and hand sanitizer. Ever had a skin infection "Keith"? |
#27
![]()
posted to rec.boats
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On 5 Feb 2007 18:02:57 -0800, "
wrote: Why is it a joke? I always carry a water bottle for washing the salt from my hands after I have washed my hand in sea water. This minimizes the irritation on my skin and helps keeping the skin problem down. Of course, I also use hand cream; this is a given. I guess not everyone has this skin problem; therefore, most people probably don't understand how this feels. Let's just say that this problem is physical, not mental. One of my sisters has a similar skin problem. If she isn't careful about what gets on her hands she ends up with sores. That water bottle works. But it is a bit too ad-hoc and tends to use more water than needed. That's the reason why I want to find something more convenient. The portable hand wash stations I've seen for sale don't match your needs. I suggest a suitable vented plastic tank to which you attach a 12v RV-type pump, or an automotive windshield pump. You can run a rubber water line and the switch wiring to where you want it in the boat, spraying over the side or over a pan. Use a nozzle that produces the spray you want. The switch can be foot operated if you so desire. Not much different than a car windshield washer setup. It will be an elegant and useful addition to your boat if properly done, and soon your boating friends will want one too (-: --Vic |
#28
![]()
posted to rec.boats
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
Jay,
You've heard of the KISS principal, right? Carry a six pack of bottled water. Use as needed. Also carry a box of handi-wipes like those used after changing a diaper. Again, use as needed. Boating is not complicated. Don't make it so. Butch wrote in message oups.com... I would like to know if there is a simple device for washing hand with fresh water. My boat is a 18-ft center console that is too small for adding a sink and faucet in it; moreover, a sink and faucet is overkill for my need. I will wash my hand in sal****er, and then use freshwater as the last step to wash away the sal****er from my hand. Therefore, I only need a small amount of fresh water. I have a feeling that one- gallon of freshwater should be more than enough for several persons use in a fishing trip. I would like to know a neat way to accomplish this. What I am looking for is something works like a garden hand-pump spray bottle. Then I can put the water tank under the floor, run a short lengh of water hose to the back of the boat and connecting to a small water faucet, somehow having a small hand pump next to the faucet. When I need to use it, all I need to do is pump it several times, turn on the faucet to let out a stream of water spray to wash the sal****er away from my hand (or wash the eyeglasses), let the water to run down to the floor and get air dried or drained to the scuppers. When I am done, I simply turn off the faucet. The next guy who wants to use it probably doesn't need to pump because there should still be enough water pressure in the system. Is there such a thing available in the market? Currently, I use a one-gal water bottle and pour over my hands. But this is not neat and is not elegant. Moreover, this tends to use more water than I really need. I have thought of using a store-bought large spring water tank that has a small faucet at the bottom and use gravity to dispense the water. But this requires me to put the water tank a couple feet above the floor. I would like to put the water tank under the floor to lower the center of gravity as much as possible (afterall it is a small boat). Thanks for any pointer in advance. Jay Chan |
#29
![]()
posted to rec.boats
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in message oups.com... I can understand his concern - I have a similar problem on board but related to infection as a result of my arthritis treatment. I'm more prone to infection as a result of that treatment and fresh water is much better to rinse with than salt - in particular in a harbor that has a sewer treatment near it. Or the CT River after rain which is full of...well this is a family group. What I do is carry a gallon of fresh water and use a hand sprayer - hence my advice to jay. Stick the gallon under the console and use it if I need to. Girlieman! |
#30
![]()
posted to rec.boats
|
|||
|
|||
![]()
On Feb 6, 8:45 am, "Don White" wrote:
"Short Wave Sportfishing" wrote in ooglegroups.com... I can understand his concern - I have a similar problem on board but related to infection as a result of my arthritis treatment. I'm more prone to infection as a result of that treatment and fresh water is much better to rinse with than salt - in particular in a harbor that has a sewer treatment near it. Or the CT River after rain which is full of...well this is a family group. What I do is carry a gallon of fresh water and use a hand sprayer - hence my advice to jay. Stick the gallon under the console and use it if I need to. Girlieman! Canadian. |
Reply |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Cannot See the Telltail Water Stream from the Motor | General | |||
rec.boats.paddle sea kayaking FAQ | General | |||
Water systems on my boat - need suggestions, please. | Cruising | |||
rec.boats.paddle sea kayaking FAQ | General | |||
Battery Water (revisited) | Electronics |