Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#17
![]()
posted to rec.boats,rec.boats.building,rec.boats.cruising
|
|||
|
|||
![]() "Bruce in Bangkok" wrote in message ... On Sat, 29 Mar 2008 17:06:05 +0100, "Edgar" wrote: "Bruce in Bangkok" wrote in message . .. On Sat, 29 Mar 2008 01:12:17 GMT, Jere Lull wrote: The tide and sling rig isn't logical and I can't believe ever existed. If you are working on the boat at low tide just prop it up on the beach. Heck, they been painting lobster boats that way for a couple of hundred years, or more. Probably been cleaning those oyster tongers down your way using the same scheme. There is some logical use for such a device if you plan to do some major work which you might not be able to finish on one low water session. Look, if you are going to hang a boat in a sling then(1) you use a travel lift or crane device and pick it up, or (2) you position the slings and float the boat into them at high tide and when the tide goes down you can work on it. However using method (2) every high tide the boat has sufficient water around it to float it. so why not just put it on the beach? Lash legs in place and you have exactly the same situation - at high tide the water covers everything up to the water line. The slings also have the disadvantage of being rather costly. Have you prices 15,000 lb. capacity slings recently? Better yet price 17,000 lb. slings, I want a bit of a safety factor on this project. Another problem is what are you going to tie the slings to? Have you got a couple of strategically located trees available? Or are you going to build something? Bruce-in-Bangkok (correct email address for reply) No, sorry,I did not make my scheme clear. My idea was for a floating dock supported by air tanks so it could float with a yacht in it. Position the empty dock over the beach and flood the tanks so it sinks. Side supports stick up above water so you can correctly position the yacht above it. Next low water the yacht will be sitting on it and you close the valves on the tanks so the whole issue floats on the next tide and continues to float the yacht on every tide until the job is finished. Then you flood the tanks again and the yacht sails away. You could build a thing like that comparitively cheaply as there is nothing mechanical on it at all. |
Thread Tools | Search this Thread |
Display Modes | |
|
|
![]() |
||||
Thread | Forum | |||
Cand standard #2 fuel dock diesel be greener than "bio"? | General | |||
"Jeffrey Boyd" is an anagram of "Midget Runt" in Japanese | ASA | |||
Battery with "Double the Power" or that takes up "Half the Space" | ASA | |||
"WHITE-WATER adrenaline rush" | General |