Yacht Aditi

Pick a number?

Or as the ship’s cat says it’s the same as ‘chasing your tail’. Our thanks to Clare of s/v Suvi for helping to chase the tails and not only fix the bilge pump alarm which is linked to two sump areas, the engine room and mid-ships. Our bilges have always filled relatively quickly so the alarm is expected to sound too frequently. But perhaps by fitting the watermaker we have found the root of the problem; when an old watermaker was removed the freshwater feed line to the tank was severed but left open. Heeling to port this has possibly

It’s a Shoe In

Trying to think ahead to warmer climes is tricky but we hold out hope that we will see temperatures in the 20s and 30s!?! To that end much research has been done on the most appropriate footwear to suit all terrains, water types and weathers. A couple of blogs for cruisers waxed lyrical about Keen’s sandals. After some more research we decided on Venice H2 for the girls and Newport H2 for Paul. They have arrived and have a big thumbs up. Comfortable, practical and look alright for trekking sandals! The ship’s cat watched as Fran modelled the footwear. Sadly a thorough check

Got No Sole

The latter part of fitting the watermaker lifting the cabin sole through the vessel from the stern to the water tank and then running the 8mm pneumatic tubing through all the formers. We struck gold when we found that the water tank had already been tapped for a watermaker so at this end it was just plug and play with a pnuematic air line connector. We are setting up a secondary fresh water feed line and pneumatic connectors in case we need to bypass the water tank at any stage. The connectors simply unclip/clip-in so redirection would take a few

Inflated Opinion

Eventually something was going to blow up….the liferaft is in for servicing and the cylinder fired. Checking out as fully serviceable the raft will be vacuum packed and refit with the required safety gear to meet the ARC SOLAS specifications. The procedure is being witnessed by an equally inflated crew under going dry suit testing.

NMEA with Chips!

Activating a USB port to enable NMEA data inputs within an older (pre-USB plug-and-play era) was proving a source of frustration. Activating the port via a direct USB feed taken from a protected circuit driven my an Actisense Multiplexer was the intended solution but Open CPN was unable to recognise the USB port on a laptop. Although there are a number of costly solutions on the market but after fitting (the brilliant) multiplexer adding another unit in the chain seemed folly. Enter the FDIC chip which fools a USB port into recognising RS232 inputs, which are direct NMEA feeds taken

Chinese Lanterns

The stern light bracket is ready to fit after a bit of grinding and polishing. The picture also shows a Chinese copy of an Aqua Signal 40 Series light, a 40% cost reduction. The lantern is identical in almost all respects. The bayonet fitting for the lamp in the Chinese housing is an upgrade but the cable seal is a poor design so is being modified by re-cutting a thread and fabricating a brass collar. A plug has been turned out of nylon and is ready to weld into the base. The brass rod will be drilled, turned and threaded.

Back to Work

Welding a 316 steel bracket to raise the stern light from deck level which otherwise reflects brightly off the pushpit and liferaft bracket – if the Oriana were dead astern in the pitch black you would hear it long before seeing any navigation lights. Once raised well above deck level we can return to peering into the mystic depths of darkness as well as retain our night vision.

Plumb.I.am

The posts have slowed recently as packing the house has moved up the priority list especially with daytime temps of 3 degs C. Boatwise the watermaker is the main show at this time. The first issue has been to decide whether or not to run with pre-existing holes in the hull or to drill more. And if drilling one or two more then where? What would the pipe routes be and what fittings would be required? Eventually it was decided that we would use the pre-existing through hull fittings that had effectively been made redundant. That gave rise to the