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Tim April 11th 07 12:58 AM

generators
 
On Apr 10, 12:41 pm, "Chuck Gould" wrote:
Turn a clay flower pot upside down over the flame, but
leave a hatch or window open a tiny crack because this technique will
produce a lot of moisture. Make sure some air for combustion gets in
under the bottom of the pot.


not only so, but the propane heater will put off fumes so you do need
some ventilation



Chuck Gould April 11th 07 03:16 AM

generators
 
On Apr 10, 12:53?pm, Harry Krause wrote:


These Honda generators are very quiet, certainly much more quiet than
the damned sailboats with their damned metal stays, and rigging pieces
and parts banging against the mast and each other all night long. If the
God of Sleep were just, he'd chainsaw the masts and rigging off
sailboats in an anchorage at sundown.- Hide quoted text -


You have a point. If the sailors want to bang all night, it can get a
bit noisy.



JR North April 11th 07 04:45 AM

generators
 
The least popular with me are blowboaters on the hook who fire up their
put-put-cough-cough diesel gennys on a still, cold morning, where the
exhaust waffs over the water and right up the hull of Cruis;n Rulz! and
into the open port lights.
JR

Chuck Gould wrote:
On Apr 10, 7:03?am, "longshot" wrote:

i am contemplating getting a little portable 1000w generator for "camping"
out on the water for running a fan / coffee maker. any suggestions on what
to buy or not to buy?

Thanks
Rob



A propane galley stove?

We do carry a 1000 watt Honda portable, (and we use it almost
exclusively for holiday lights during boat parades in December). The
1000 watt Honda is also my backup plan if I blow battery management
and run out of juice- it can be used to recharge the starting bank
enough to crank the engine.

We find we don't need a generator, even if anchored out for a few
days. Propane stove, diesel furnace (that gets used at least a little
bit probably 11 months of the year), great big house battery. We run
the refrigerator 6-8 hours a day and that keeps everything cold, and
we only run cabin lights in compartments we are using. Hot water for
dishes can be heated up on the stove, leaving the hot water in the the
water tank available for showers. The hot water tank keeps the water
warm for about a day or so.

If you want to be the least popular guy in the anchorage, fire up a
genset about 0600 on a summer morning simply so you can boil water for
coffee. :-(



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