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Toilet Macerator Division Blog: Importance of Good Sail Maintenance
Your Toilet Macerator Suppliers Share Amazing Tips for Keeping Your Sails in Great Shape
Raritan Engineering your toilet macerator manufacturers would like to share with you this week some great information regarding the importance of good sail maintenance.
1. Keep your sails out of the sun
If you have furling systems, this may be just a matter of furling sails when not in use. For non-furling sails, this means covering or stowing sails. There are cover options for both mainsails and headsails, allowing the sail to stay rigged and protected between uses.
2. Protect your furled sails
Most owners use sewn-on sun covers to protect furled sails. Sunbrella and WeatherMax are the fabrics commonly used for sun covers. For racer-cruisers and some racing sails like furling code zeros, there are lighter weight options such as UV-treated Dacron.
All sun covers should be inspected regularly and repaired if damaged. Generally speaking, covers should be re-stitched every three years or so to prevent more extensive damage to the fabric that can occur from flogging due to compromised stitching.
To provide maximum protection for your sails, sun covers require care and maintenance. Remember, if you can see the sailcloth below the cover...so can the sun!
3. Keep your sails clean
After sun, the second-worst enemy of any sail is salt; but other types of dirt and debris can be just as damaging. Periodic sail washing is key to maintaining your sails. A couple common-sense rules apply to frequency: 1) a sail that has been exposed to saltwater should be washed sooner rather than later, and 2) all other varying degrees of grime should be removed when possible.
4. Protect them from the elements
Sailmakers generally refer to the life of a sail in hours or seasons, rather than years. The lifespan is affected by the amount of time sailing and the level of care given to the sails. In the mid-Atlantic region, the main sailing season can begin in early spring and extend late into the fall.
If you know your sails are going to be sitting idle on the boat in a marina for at least a month or more during a sailing season, you can extend sail life by taking the sails off of your boat and stowing them.
5. Inspect sails regularly
At least once-a-year sails should get a check-up. To do this yourself, find a dry place in good light where you can lay them flat, then work your way over every inch of the sail, looking for trouble spots such as abrasion or loose stitching. Small problems can turn into bigger problems later, so be sure to note even the smallest details.
We Continue to Discuss Ways to Extend the Life of Your New Sails
6. Tape the turnbuckle
Your toilet macerator experts talk about how if you've ever scraped your finger on a piece of hardware, then you know it's sharp enough to damage your sail. Even seemingly blunt objects (like a spreader) can damage sails on a tack, so take a look around (and up) to see what can or should be covered to protect your sails. If you have an extra piece of spinnaker cloth, wipe it across every surface of your boat and rigging.
7. Check the leech
Even a well-protected spreader-tip or navigation light can wear a sail tack-after-tack. For these areas, a spreader-patch (or navigation light-patch, etc.) might be the answer.
8. Don't wait for repairs
A lot of catastrophic sail failures can be traced back to a small repair that was never made. When you notice a small hole or a chafed spot that's getting increasingly worse, save yourself serious head- and wallet-ache by addressing the problem while it is still small.
9. Bag It
Pretty simple here. There's a good reason new sails come with a sturdy bag and it's not just another place for a logo. That bag is a much cheaper sacrificial covering than the sail inside of it. Take a look at an old sailbag that's scuffed and torn-up, now imagine if that were your sail.
10. If you don't know, ask
Curious about some sail-care method you've heard somebody touting on the dock or trying to figure out if your sail could use a new piece of webbing on the tack? Feel free to call the service team at your local Quantum loft. We're happy to field your questions and provide helpful pointers. Consider us a member of your team.
So don't forget these great ways to keep your sails in great shape for a long time. 1) Keep your sails out of the sun; 2) don't wait for repairs; and 3) tape the turnbuckle.
Quieting Your Boat's Engine
The engine in my 1977 Down East 45 schooner, Britannia, is a tried and trusted - but noisy - Perkins 4-236, an 85-horsepower four-cylinder diesel.
I call the space the equipment bay. It runs 12 feet under the saloon floorboards and is 3 feet wide at the sole level, then tapers to just 15 inches at the bottom of the 41⁄2-foot-deep bilge. Seven removable floorboards give amazing access to all the equipment below, but the large space also acts as a massive boombox.
There are a number of products that claim to significantly reduce noise from machinery, and some are specifically designed for boats. The trouble with most of these is they are also specifically aimed at your bank balance!
In simple terms, the object of sound insulation is to absorb noise at its source, and thereby minimize what filters into the interior of the boat. It would be practically impossible to eliminate this altogether, but I had effectively reduced the engine noise from a similar diesel on a previous boat simply by installing a false floor beneath the cabin sole.
Before I started work on Britannia, I wanted to take a reading of the sound levels to have a numerical comparison after the modifications were complete. I downloaded a neat iPhone app, a decibel meter by Decibel Meter Pro, for the vast sum of 99 cents, from iTunes. It was very easy to use, and I took readings at head height in the center of the saloon.
Fitting the False Floor
To get started, it was first necessary to make support battens for the false floor panels to lie in, under the existing plywood sole. I bought a 24-by-48-inch sheet of ½-inch plywood and cut it into 4-inch-wide strips with my table saw. I also made ¾-inch square battens out of hardwood.
I screwed the ¾-inch square battens to the sides of each aperture to support the ends of the false floors. I painted the beams and all the new timbers white.
The sound-deadening properties of a ½-inch-thick sheet are actually better than the ¾-inch-thick marine plywood sole, which is roughly 35 pounds per cubic foot. (The MDF sheets were also available in ¾-inch thickness but would have been heavier and more expensive. In the end, I decided to compromise between weight, density and price, and go for the thinner stock.)
The simplest, time-honored method to handle boards covering apertures is to cut a hole in the board big enough to get a couple of fingers through to lift it in and out. But these MDF boards were too big and heavy for that, and it would also have allowed a little bit more noise and heat to escape.
The weight of the new fiberboards was 60 pounds, but it's all positioned low in the hull, and it was a small price to pay for reducing the noise. When lying between the beams, their weight also keeps them firmly in place. The sole and subfloor now has a combined thickness of 1¼ inches, with a density of about 80 pounds per cubic foot.
Beat the Heat
To complete the project, there was one more thing I wanted to do. We could often feel heat permeating through the single-thickness cabin sole when either of the diesel engines had been running a long time, especially on our own soles when walking barefoot.
I bought two 4-by-8-foot sheets of Rmax Thermasheath R6 foam-board insulation from Lowe's for $21.98 each. These are 2 inches thick, with aluminum foil on one face and an insulation rating of R6, which is the highest available for this thickness of foam. I cut them to the sizes I needed at the store using a sharp knife, which helped me fit them in my car.
The section of floor around the Perkins engine was particularly awkward because parts of the top of the engine were higher than the bottom of the floor beams. In fact, the valve cover was only an inch below the sole. This was, of course, the principal source of all the noise, so it needed special attention anyway.
I fitted battens all around the engine as I had in all the other openings, then shaped pieces of fiberboard to fit around the engine as well.
The remainder of the floor now had the ¾-inch plywood sole pieces, with 2 inches of foam glued underneath, then a ½-inch air gap, then the ½-inch MDF false floor. It was now certainly a compact floor.
After all this backbreaking work, I was naturally keen to take new readings on the decibel meter. With only the main engine running at the same revolutions per minute as before, my iPhone app meter read 65, a reduction of 20 db!
In addition to a considerable reduction in noise, there is now no perceptible heat coming through the floorboards, which helps to keep the living area cooler. Heat is carried outside by the engine-room extractor fans, and the noise from them is much reduced too.
Most projects I have undertaken on Britannia resulted in visible improvements, most notably when I renovated the teak-and-holly sole.
This method of sound insulation would be very worthwhile for any boat, offering excellent noise reduction for minimal financial outlay. I actually used some spare pieces of MDF to double the wall thickness in the spaces where my two air-conditioning units were installed, and this reduced the noise of the compressor and fan as well.
There are, of course, no labor charges factored into the cost of the job, which took me four days to complete, but messing about on boats is supposed to be fun.
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via Extending the Life of Your Sails
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via Quieting Your Boat's Engine
Electric Toilets Division Blog: Catching Fish With the Aid of Chart Plotters
Great Tips On Using Your Chart Plotter to Fish
Raritan Engineering your electric toilets suppliers would like to share with you these topics we thought would be of interest to you this month regarding catching fish with the aid of chart plotters.
Your electric toilets manufacturers discuss how the aptly named fish finder ranks at the top of every angler's list of necessary electronics. But where does the chart plotter fit in that high-tech hierarchy?
In the past, plotters helped anglers efficiently find the fishing grounds, and little else. But these days, using tracks, routes, waypoints, overlays, trolling-motor connectivity and sonar-logging features, plotter charts become more like treasure maps, leading anglers to optimal fish and bait concentrations.
Pro fishermen and charter captains liken plotters to computers. Here's how five of them use their units to find and catch more fish.
Plotter and Trolling Motor Connection
“I think of my boat as my office and my plotter as my office computer, and everything I need is on there,” says Capt. Phillip Wilds, who runs Anchored Charters Guide Service out of Panama City, Florida.
When fishing offshore, Wilds uses tracks and the Minn Kota's SpotLock to see the boat's relationship to the structure he's fishing and to stay on that structure.
Use Tracks to Pattern Fish
Nugent targets stripers, chasing them under the birds in run-and-gun fashion. “Tracks allow me to see the direction the fish are trending at any time. Whenever we find bait or a bunch of birds on the water, or if we're trolling and get a knockdown, I drop a waypoint.”
Because he targets migrating fish, he does a master reset on his Raymarines at the end of each fishing year. Other captains, particularly those who tournament-fish or bottomfish for species such as snapper and grouper, religiously catalog their points and tracks on SD cards by region.
Keep and Catalog Plotter Tracks for Future Use
Maus uses tracks to troll for a variety of species and to help him navigate back to unfamiliar locations. He also employs Simrad's TrackBack feature on his sonar to enter waypoints when he sees something new.
We Continue Talking About This Great Way to Go Fishing
See your choice of electric toilets here at Raritan Engineering, where we always take care of your marine sanitation supply needs.
If he's pre-fishing an area for sails, he might mark 20 or 30 waypoints where he found bait. The next day, though the bait will have moved, Maus says he'll run-and-gun the points because “something will have held bait in those locations.”
Changing Track Colors Based on Temperature
Capt. Greg Shute fishes much of the Chesapeake Bay out of his 27-foot Judge. He uses his Furuno TZtouch2 and 1870 units when he's drift-fishing for stripers. “Usually, I'll have a point or something I'm trying to drift over,” he says.
“I can zigzag over areas while looking for fish and note where the bottom composition changes,” he says. “I will then use where I see the color changes in conjunction with marks I had on the fish finder.”
Shute also changes the actual color of a given day's track so that he can tell the different trips he has made. By looking at the tracks and waypoints he has used, he can tell where he has fished and where he has caught fish.
Hunt and Scout with Waypoints
Tournament captain Bill Platt keeps his data on SD cards based on region. “I can see where I catch fish year after year. The plotter is a computer now, not just a navigation chart.”
He uses his Helm Master's Set Point function to stay on the fish and keep the stern to the current. If the fish move, he drifts again and watches his track.
“I find so much stuff looking around my different waypoints,” he adds. “If I run a charter, I go to a spot and I look all around. It's like finding treasure.”
So don't forget these great ways to use chart plotters to be a great compliment to your fishing arsenal. 1) Use tracks to pattern fish; 2) changing track colors based on temperature; and 3) keep and catalog plotters tracks for future use.
Sailing Generates Pleasure and the Feeling of Self-Reliance
I have ataxic cerebral palsy, a condition that I have had since birth, which affects my fine and gross motor skills. I am unable to walk and have to use a wheelchair to get about.
In 2009, I was keen to find a sporting activity in which I could take part. I was certainly interested in giving it a go, so they asked what opportunities were available and I was invited down to check it out.
At the time Wealden Sailability, founded by Brian Stanley, was based at Bough Beech Reservoir near Edenbridge. The first day I spent there was thoroughly enjoyable. I was taken out on the water by one of their volunteer instructors in a Hansa 303, a boat which is specifically designed to be sailed by a disabled sailor.
They have 80-90 volunteers, hundreds of clients and cater for 35 visitors per session and take them out twice a week. I race in one of the two Paralympic class 2.4 dinghies, which are part of a fleet they use for weekly racing events.
There are few sports where disabled people can compete with non-disabled people on the same terms, but on the water everyone is equal.
The charity's trustees and volunteers put in a lot of hard work and give up a great deal of their time from April to October each year. To give disabled people such as myself the opportunity and sheer exhilaration to get on the water.
So it was no surprise to me that in 2015 Wealden Sailability received the Queen's award, the highest recognition of volunteering in the UK.
My advice to others would be to encourage anyone who has a disability, whatever it is, to get in touch with Wealden Sailability and give it a go.
After all, I have been sailing with them for eight years and I can't swim. So there is no excuse - and I promise you'll thoroughly enjoy it!
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via How 5 Pros Catch More Fish with Chart Plotters
via Blog: “Sailing generates pleasure and the feeling of self-reliance”
TruDesign Suppliers Discuss Why Seafarers Are Good for the World
Your TruDesign Manufacturers Share Great Reasons Why Seafarers Are Crucial for Us
Raritan Engineering yourTruDesignprofessionals would like to share with you these topics we thought would be of interest to you this month regarding why seafarers are good for the world.
Your TruDesign specialists share how the 25th of June has been christened as the 'Day of the Seafarer'. While the world sits back to enjoy their Sunday, the sea trade carries on no holidays, no rest!
This year, the IMO has themed the day as 'Seafarers Matter' and for good reason that one might be able to grasp better as this article progresses. Your marine parts for sale distributors gives reasons why they were established in 2010 by a Diplomatic Conference in Manila, the Seafarer's Day aims to recognise the contribution of seafarers to the economy, trade and regular civil life.
Let's take a look at the top 5 reasons seafarers matter to the world.
1. The World Trade and GlobalizationDepend on Seafarers
Shipping is an industry that contributes over 90% to the world economy. There are about 51400 merchant ships plying all over the world, transferring goods between places, keeping the economy running.
The figure of 90% isn't an arbitrary figure but rather a 'precise estimation' and rightfully so. Your marine parts Canada suppliers discuss why shipping still happens to be the cheapest mode of transport. Some might ignorantly argue about airplanes, trains etc. being equally important.
Seafarers, with their theoretical knowledge of it all combined with their gradual increase in experience, make it all happen.
2. Daily Lives Of People Depends On Seafarers
The food you eat, the clothes you wear, the oil that fuels your automobile- EVERYTHING has been transferred via ships. In fact, most of the products in your vicinity now have probably been on a ship at some point!
The errors are the exception, the rule is that seafarers always deliver these products in their prime quality and on time and in the process save everybody a great deal of money. If not for a seafarer worth his salt, port delays and dues, claims against cargo and so on would drive up the price to a point where it would not be a viable business.
Your TruDesign Experts Further Talk About How Great Seafarers Really Are
One must stop to think the level of involvement of every single seafarer out there.
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3. Not Everyone Can Do This Job
As mentioned before, the training is long and academically challenging, with topics ranging from astronomy to engines to law (among many others). However, it is the mental constitution of a seafarer that really sets out the fabric for a career at sea.
4. Saving Lives At Sea
Instead of getting into technical jargon about SAR and IAMSAR let us for once think about all the recent news about the immigration crisis from war-ridden countries.
Even recently, the Indian Government carried out a massive evacuation of civilians from a war-torn country, lauded across the world, that involved merchant ships as well.
5. UnrecognizedBut Unfazed
The layman tends to ask the usual questions (what do you do at sea?!) and assumes that the seafarer earns a great deal of money, paid out to travel the world and live the good life. Your marine products corp professionals share how companies are constantly reducing salaries to make their operations more and more economically viable. Regulations are getting more and more stringent with ever increasing paperwork and therefore, pressure on the Master and his crew.
With the recent advancements in technology wherein ships are gradually moving towards being unmanned, it could be deemed as a small threat to the seafaring profession.
It is indeed high time the world woke up to this immense contribution and started appreciating the unknown seafarer a little more. It is high time that companies revisited the salary structures of a seafarer. It is high time that the world realizedthat Seafarers Matter.
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via5 Reasons Seafarers Matter To The World
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Raritan Marine Toilet Systems Distributors Give Hull Sodablasting Ideas
RaritanMarine Toilet Systems Experts Discuss the Importance of Keeping Your Hull Clean
Raritan Engineeringyour marine toilet systems specialists would like to share with you this week some ideas for how to sodablast your boat's hull.
Quick. What's your least favorite boat maintenance project? Cleaning the bilge? Changing the engine oil? ... How about stripping off several years worth of bottom paint?
After that experience, Ralph decided to look into sodablasting, featured in the October 2011 issue ofPractical Sailor. One of the chief complaints you hear about any for-hire boat work is the exorbitant price charged, but once you start to do the math-and start thinking about your health-a $1,500 fore-hire sodablasting job doesn't seem so indulgent.
One of the biggest mistakes an owner makes when estimating how much time it takes to strip a hull is to peck away at one of the easy spots where the paint is peeling and then assume the rest of the coating will come off just as easily. Ralph gives a more realistic formula for estimating the amount of time a stripping project will take.
Now that you've got your total area, you can figure out the amount of actual time it will take you to do the job. Start your stopwatch and attack one square-foot of an easy section. Do the same to a patch where the paint is well adhered.
Here's an example: Your boat has a 30-foot waterline, a 6-foot draft, a waterline beam of 10 feet, and is a medium-displacement vessel. Our fuzzy math for a medium-displacement sailboat
WSA = Lwl x (Bwl + T)
says you've got 360 square feet of paint to strip: 30 x (10 + 6) (.75) = 360.
Marine Toilet Systems Suppliers at Raritan Share Excellent Hull Cleaning Ideas With You
Yourmarine toilet systemsexperts give information regarding how next comes the all-important apportionment of easy versus difficult paint removal. In this case, 85 percent of the hull is tough stuff, taking four minutes per square foot to strip: 0.85 x 360 x 4 = 1,224 minutes of backbreaking work.
Now, how much is your time worth? And don't forget the money you'll be spending on scrapers, chemical strippers (if you use them), sand paper, etc. As much as I like to do my own boat work, this is one for-hire job that is worth considering.
You have a thick layer of antifouling paint on the bottom of your boat. It's rough and worn around the edges, so you'd like to get rid of it and have a nice smooth bottom that will help you sail faster.
The soda in soda blasting is sodium bicarbonate, which is similar to the baking soda you buy for cooking at home, but crystallized so it can be used in the rain.
Because the soda breaks upon impact into micro-fragments, it doesn't damage substrate the way sand blasting can. All it does is peel off the paint. Soda blasting can also be done on cars, masonry and rusted metal parts.
A professional blaster will roll in with a large truck, completely mask off the boat and the area beneath it, and then set to work. According to Armstrong, it takes about a day to set up the containment area for an average boat. The soda blasting goes really quickly, once we have everything set up, he says. For most boats, the entire process takes one to two days and most of that time is the setup.
Armstrong recommends that the hull also is lightly sanded after blasting to remove any remaining soda residue or paint that might have been only partially blasted off.
How much does it cost? According to Armstrong, the price varies depending on the length of the vessel. For example, a 30-foot boat might be around $45 per foot, while a 100-foot boat would be around $130 per foot because of the increased beam. Our average job works out around $35 to $45 per foot, he says.
When the barrier coat has dried and hardened, you can apply bottom paint in the color of your choice. Then you can launch and go sailing, safe in the knowledge that your boat is protected in the best way possible.
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viaMaking a Case for Sodablasting Your Hull
viaHow To: Soda Blast Your Boat
Seacocks Suppliers Discuss How There Are Many Ways to Win
Your Seacocks Manufacturers Share Amazing Tips On How to Win That Crucial Race
Raritan Engineering yourseacocksprofessionals would like to share with you these topics we thought would be of interest to you this month regarding the many ways to win a race.
I had one of the best high school sailing coaches in the country and one of the best college coaches, but boy, did they ever approach the start of practice differently. Your seacocks distributors talk about how my high school coach placed our names on the board in order of where we currently stood on the team. My college coach intentionally put us in random order on the board.
We often hear about fear of failure, but it's seldom we hear about its equally evil twin, fear of success.
The anticipation of screwing up the lead you've achieved can create a whirlwind of thoughts that are unrelated to sailing smart and fast. er events? What will people say? Do I really deserve this?
Thoughts related to two very different outcomes, failure or success, have something in common. Both have nothing to do with the task at hand.
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Outcomes are largely based on uncontrollable variables, like how fast other people are sailing. Wanting to be in the lead has little to do with actually being there (except that it may have helped you to work hard to become good). If you do find yourself in the lead, you did something right.
For some, being ahead is the norm. For others, it can be viewed as a fleeting moment. How do you interpret the situation of being ahead? If you look at it in a neutral manner, like it's simply information, then you are on the right track.
First, notice the language in your brain. Is it helping or hurting? Does it make you tense or loose? Awareness is a key to success.
Then, embrace controllable variables. These may enter your mind, but remember garbage in, garbage out. In other words, you can practice steering your thoughts to the important variables of sailing fast.
If you're going to play mind games with yourself, play games that work for you, not against you. I often think of golfers who have told me, I do great on the back 9, but I'm lousy on the front 9.
Picture what you want to happen, rather than what you want to avoid. Your mind programs your body for action. It's OK for fears of failure to come and go, but allow for more repetitions of what you want. More importantly, picture the steps involved.
Practice mental skills. These are like any other skills. Could you imagine having good roll tacks without practicing them?
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viaWhat to do When You're Winning
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Raritan Boat Cleaning Products Distributors Talk About the Benefit of Keeping Portlights in Good Condition
Raritan Boat Cleaning Products Suppliers Share Tips on How to Keep Your Portlights in Good Repair
Raritan Engineeringyour boat cleaning products manufacturers are excited to share with you this week information regarding the benefit of keeping your portlights clean.
Leaky portlights and hatches are one of the more frustrating projects to face on an old boat.
The best case scenarios are easiest to deal with, and these are usually the ones in which bedding has dried out and a simple removal, cleanup, and re-bed game plan is all it takes. When an acrylic (Plexiglas) or Lexan (polycarbonate) lens is removed, be very careful with solvents used to clean away old bedding because they can destroy the surface of once clear plastic.
Raritan Boat Cleaning Products Experts Discuss Further How Easy Portlight Maintenance Can Be
Yourboat cleaning productssuppliers talk about how to reattach the mechanically fastened lens, use a thick, adhesive butyl-rubber tape or equivalent bedding material instead of conventional tube-type sealants. (Practical Sailor testers have had good luck with Bomar hatch mounting tape.) Place the -inch-wide bedding on the lens like thick tape, and squeeze in the mechanical joint between the lens and the cabin house. It acts like a compressed grommet as well as an adhesive seal.
In all too many cases, the leak is a symptom rather than a problem. The underlying cause likely is that the holes in the monocoque structure create a loss of stiffness, resulting in excess cabin house flex. Rig loads carried to chainplates, mid-boom sheeting arrangements, and genoa track-induced flex can cause significant deflection.
In some cases, the problem can be solved by reinforcing the inside perimeter of the aperture with a stiff metal surround or additional laminate. Without addressing the structural problems that led to the leak, the drip, drip, drip will no doubt start again.
Are spares available for my hatch or portlight?
Spare parts can be supplied for all our current hatch and portlight ranges. For older hatches which are no longer manufactured a selection of the most frequently requested spares is available. It is necessary to identify your hatch/portlight to determine which spares you will need.
How to identify my portlight?
There are some small differences between the Mk1 and the Mk2 hatches. Please have a look to see which one you have on your boat. This is very important for when it comes to ordering spare parts for you hatches.
My hatch/portlight is leaking. What should I do?
If a Lewmar hatch or portlight does start to leak it is important to establish the leak path. Where the water finally appears in side the boat is not always a good indication of the leak path.
Possible leak paths are:
Under the lower frame. This is caused by insufficient bedding compound between the low frame and the deck, or the compound breaking down over time.
Between the lower frame and the rubber seal (gasket). This may be caused by the upper frame being distorted or a loss of seal pressure. Lay a straight edge along the sides of the hatch and also diagonally across the lid to check for twist.
Between the acrylic and the upper frame. (Not Standard portlights and Concept hatches.) This is caused by a breakdown in the adhesion between the sealant and the upper frame or acrylic.
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viaRepairing Leaky Portlights
Raritan Marine Hot Water Heater Professionals Share Tips for Making Your Sailing Trip Pet Safe
Raritan Marine Hot Water Heater Distributors Give Great Pointers to Help Your Dog Enjoy the Journey
Raritan Engineering yourmarine hot water heaterssuppliers would like to share with you these topics we thought would be of interest to you this month regarding amazing tips to keep your dog safe while sailing.
Your marine hot water heaters specialists discuss how your dog will likely enjoy being out on the open ocean as much as you will, but just like with human passengers, safety measures must be taken!
Create an Emergency Plan
Make sure you consider an emergency plan of what you'll do in the event that your dog falls overboard.
Choose who will navigate the boat and who will keep visuals on the floating dogs.Dogs don't have the ability to wave to signal where they are, and their small floating heads can easily get lost among the waves. Your marine parts suppliers give reasons as to why it's essential to assign specific people to the task of keeping an eye on the dog's location if they fall over.
Once you get near the dog, cut the engine and yell for the dog to swim towards you.Do not jump in to help, as even a medium-sized panicked dog may accidentally pull you under(panicked humans do the same thing it's simply instinctual). Instead, call your dog over and pick them up out of the water (most dog life jackets are equipped with a top handle for this very purpose).
Pack a Doggy First Aid Kit
Keep a first aid kit on hand for both your human and canine crew. Your marine parts and accessories suppliers discuss why you'll want to have a few different items on hand for your pooch, including:
Flea and tick medication
Medications your dog is currently taking (have extra in case you get stuck in an emergency)
Antibiotic ointment for scrapes or minor cuts
Dramamine in the event of sea sickness (make sure to talk to your vet about this)
Know the Rules
If you'll be boating across state lines or internationally, make sure to read up on local legislation regarding dogs on boats, as different areas may have different rules on what's allowed and what's not.
Raritan Marine Hot Water Heater Professionals Talk About Keeping Your Furry Friend Alive While Sailing
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Get a Canine Life Jacket
Most dogs tend to like water some, like Labradors, are quite famous for their water-loving spirit. Even though dogs enjoy water, they may not all be great swimmers. Your marine hot water heaters experts share information regarding how dogs aren't exactly the best as judging their own skill level, so it's your job as the fur parent to watch out for them.
When out at sea, all dogs should wear life jackets (yes, even those H20 obsessed Labs). Your marine parts distributors talk about why ocean water is choppy and rougher than your local pond, and even strong swimmers could get pulled under.
We've got a greatarticle highlighting some of the very best dog life jackets on the market take a look if you don't own one yet!
Bring Doggy Sunscreen
The majority of humans (especially the pale kind) know to lather up the sunscreen in the summer. What you may not know is that dogs need sun protection too! Dogs with very thin or very light fur are especially at risk.
The on and off boat commands are key for the docking process. It's during this time that most accidents occur, as dogs in enormous excitement may try to jump on or off the boat mid-docking procedure.
Making sure your dog is comfortable with your boat and life aboard the high seas will do wonders for making your trip as smooth and stress-free as possible.
Order your marine water heater hereat Raritan Engineering, where we always take care of your marine sanitation supply needs.
Adventure on the seas awaits happy travels!
viaDog Boating Safety Tips: What to Know Before Setting Out to Sea
Marine Sanitation Device Experts Give Potentially Life Saving Tactics for Getting Through Summer Squalls
Your Marine Sanitation Device Suppliers Share Further Need-to-Know Tips for You and Your Crew
Raritan Engineeringyour marine sanitation device distributors would like to share with you this week some great information regarding potentially life saving tactics for getting through tough summer squalls.
Summer is here and the time is right . . . for testing your squall-busting tactics.
The comparison of jibe-taming devices in the July 2017 issue of Practical Sailor is an appropriate topic for the summer when afternoon squalls so frequently add a little excitement during the leg back to the marina, or the approach to the next anchorage.
The ideal sail plan for dealing with squalls will vary by boat, visibility, sea conditions, and intensity of the squalls. Ideally, the helm is still relatively well-balanced and responsive for whatever point of sail you choose.
Our gaff-rigged ketch reefed down with a double- or triple-reefed main and staysail could handle about anything and still keep moving on squally night, but our main was easy to scandalize (dip the gaff) if the gusts were particularly intense.
While every squall is different, there are a few rules of thumb that can help guide your decision-making process. Yourmarine sanitation devicesuppliers discuss how the following bits are culled from my own experience and a couple of weather books I've found helpful over the years, Bill Biewenga's Weather for Sailors, and David Burch's Modern Marine Weather.
If you are the type who benefits from seminars, look for those offered by former NOAA forecaster Lee Chesneau (www. marineweatherbylee.com), author of Heavy Weather Avoidance.
Your Marine Sanitation Device Professionals Further Discuss the Importance of Always Being Alert
Squall Tips
Keep in mind, there are plenty of exceptions to these rules of thumb-but as Burch puts it, you have to start somewhere.
Taller clouds generally bring more wind.
Flat tops or boiling tops can bring brisk wind speeds and sudden wind shifts.
Slanted rain generally indicates there is wind. Squalls often move in the direction of (or sideways to) the slant, so don't assume that the cloud is dragging the rain behind it, as it might appear.
Track cloud/storm movement by taking bearings on the center of the storm (not the edges).
Watch for whitecaps below the clouds, indicating strong gusts.
Tilted clouds often bring wind.
The first gust, usually a cool downburst, can strike one-to-two miles before the cloud is overhead, and before the rain starts, so reduce sail early.
The strongest gusts and the increased wind accompanying the squall generally blow in the direction of the cloud movement, i.e. outward from the front of the cloud. However, increased wind blows outward from all sides of the cloud.
Squalls do not necessarily come from the direction of the mean ambient wind, so squalls to weather are not the ones to worry about.
The strongest wind comes with or just before the light first rain. If the squall arrives already raining hard, the worst winds are usually past, but strong gusty winds are still possible.
Behind any squall is a unnerving calm.
If you are faced with a number of successive squalls, they will often follow a predictable pattern, allowing you to fine-tune your tactics.
If you plan to bathe in the downpour, go easy on the shampoo-you might not get enough rain for a rinse.
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viaSummer Squall Sailing Tactics
Marine Ice Makers Suppliers Discuss How to Avoid Tunnel Vision While Competing
Your Marine Ice Makers Distributors Share Crucial Sailing Strategy With You Today
Raritan Engineering yourmarine ice makersspecialists would like to share with you these topics we thought would be of interest to you this month regarding how to avoid having tunnel vision while competing.
Dang it! We've all been there. You just had to cover that one competitor, no matter which way they went. Your marine ice makers professionals further discuss how you just had to follow the local knowledge, high-tailing it to one part of the course. You just had to tack immediately off the start, to set you up for the right handshift the weather forecast said was coming.
Oops. It didn't work out.
While the classic version of sailboat racing's tunnel vision is focusing in on one competitor and letting a whole pack sail by, tunnel vision or hyper-focusingon one element can affect several parts of our sailboat racing game.
This complexity can be befuddling. To overcome the complexity, it is easy to oversimplify-just picking an answer and going with it. While often keeping it simple is sufficient, to excel, it is important to let yourself think about multiple layers of information and then make decisions. What are some of these information potential pitfalls, and how do you avoid them?
Boat setup.
Most one-design boats give sailors the ability to adjust certain elements of the way the boat is set up, to enable a range of sailing weights and styles. How tight are your shrouds? How long are your spreaders? Important questions and they don't have the same answer for every team.
You can always findthe best marine ice makers here at Raritan Engineering, where we always take care of your marine sanitation supply needs.
Instead of just copying settings, seek out people who will talk with you about why they choose the settings they do, and then figure out (and test) what is right for you. Your marine ice makers manufacturers share how the same thing with sails and boat setup: different teams may want to have the vang led differently or to use a fuller main. Use what's right for you.
Sailing conditions.
Local knowledge can be a great reference, but it's not the right answer 100 percent of the time. While the locals may all say, you've got to go left, it's important to keep your eyes open.
Tracking actual observations-informed by weather forecasts and local knowledge-is a better blend of information.
Tactics/strategy.
It is so easy to get sucked in on this one. Maybe you're having a good race, and you're actually leading one of the top guys in the fleet out to the left side of the course.
You're now DFL and second-to-DFL. The times when you want to focus solely on one boat are incredibly few and far between and generally involve being the last race of a regatta when you're within a few points of only one boat. Otherwise, keep your options open.
In closing.
It is difficult to find and keep the right perspective-let yourself focus, but also be open to doing things differently. Keep your eyes and ears open, and welcome new and different information. If you're more receptive to changing situations than your competitors are, you're sure to make smarter, faster decisions.
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viaAvoid That Tunnel Vision
Raritan Marine Holding Tank Specialists Talk About the Best Sailing Knots to Use
Raritan MarineHolding Tank Distributors Share Great Knot Tying Skills With You
Raritan Engineeringwould like to share with you this week these awesome knot tying skills that will make your journeys much more enjoyable.
I'm as prone as anyone to being enchanted by the big picture-but I learned quickly where that can lead. About 10 miles off the coast of Colombia, in a gale that tragically swept a poor French cruiser right off his boat, the smallest cheapest block on board our little ketch exploded in a mess, leaving the club-footed staysail swinging around the foredeck like a Louisville slugger in the arms of an angry Skunk Ape (that's Florida-speak for Big Foot).
The article looked at a seemingly mundane subject, the kind of article no one but a serious sailor would take notice of, but the implications were far reaching.
The most familiar knot of this type is a rolling hitch. While an ordinary rolling hitch might work fine on an awning, it loses its effectiveness as loads and rope diameters increase.
While it was the most easily tied and most easily remembered, it cannot be relied on for use with anything but chain and large diameter, high-friction line at relatively low loads, in our opinion.
Bottom line:If you want to be sure your line won't slip, don't rely on the rolling hitch.
MODIFIED ROLLING HITCH
The rigger's and camel modifications to the rolling hitch increased its holding power without greatly increasing its complexity. But it still did not hold on slippery, single-braid Spectra line or on the greased stainless tube with the larger diameter line.
Raritan MarineHolding Tank Suppliers Further Discuss How to Improve Your Knot Tying Abilities
Yourholding tankmanufacturerstalk about the importance of learning new sailing knots.Bottom line:A definite improvement over the rolling hitch, but still not reliable in all situations.
SAILOR'S HITCH
The sailor's hitch took twice as long for our testers to tie as the two rolling hitches, and it was the hardest to undo when used with line. After being tensioned on the single-braid Spectra, it took a marlinspike and 10 minutes of hard work to free it.
Bottom line:This hitch does not perform any better than the modified rolling hitch, but it is harder to remember and jams when used with certain types of line.
ICICLE HITCH
The icicle hitch also took twice as long as the rolling hitch to tie, but it performed better than all but the gripper hitch, holding in all test situations.
Though the icicle hitch would separate a bit as it was tensioned, the top of the hitch never moved even with maximum load. This was the easiest hitch to undo after it had been tensioned.
Bottom line:The extra holding power and the ease of release more than make up for the slight increase in complexity of this hitch.
GRIPPER HITCH
While this hitch performed every bit as well as the icicle hitch, and might have outperformed it, had we made the testing even more difficult, its complexity can't be ignored. It took our testers one-10th the time to tie the various rolling hitches and a quarter the time to tie the sailor's or icicle hitches.
Bottom line:The gripper hitch may have the highest holding power, but in an emergency, most people will prefer a hitch they can remember easily and tie quickly.
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viaTesting Sailing Knots That Really Grip
Raritan Macerating Toilet Professionals Discuss the Excitement of Multi-Hull Sailing
RaritanMacerating Toilet Specialists Share the Pros and Cons of Multi-Hull Sailing
Raritan Engineering yourmacerating toiletdistributors would like to share with you these topics we thought would be of interest to you this month regarding the excitement of multi-hull sailing.
The Offshore Multihull Association (OMA) was formed last year by the owners of performance-oriented Multi-hulls with the goal of promoting the growth of this exciting category of performance cruising yachts.
Your macerating toilet suppliers talk about how these multi-hulls initially included Gunboats, HH Catamarans, Outremer as well as custom designs built for their unique ability to cruise in comfort while still being able to race at speeds rivaling many of the fastest monohull racing yachts.
The performance cruising multi-hull segment is one of the fastest growing segments in yachting and we are excited to launch an organization founded to support and encourage this growth, said Phil Lotz, President of the OMA, Commodore of the New York Yacht Club, and a Gunboat owner.
Do Catamaran Sailboats Make Good Cruising Boats?
With accommodation in both hulls and the central structure, catamaran sailboats have certainly got ample space below to make good cruising homes - but not all of them make good long-term cruising sailboats.
In other parts where safe anchorages are not so easy to find, mooring your catamaran in a marina can be pretty expensive. Expect to pay double what you'd pay for a monohull of similar length overall.
Find your marine toilet of choicewith us at Raritan Engineering Company, where we always take care of your marine supply needs.
The temptation is for the catamaran manufacturer to pander more to the lucrative charter market than the prospective cruising owner, and maximizeaccommodation - and hence the income for the charter company - to the detriment of everything else.
Great Accommodation in Catamaran Sailboats
Three separate cabins, each with a double berth, is the norm in a 38 foot catamaran sailboat designed for chartering.
Your macerating toilet manufacturers share how unlike a monohull, these double berths stay reasonably flat and level when underway, so individual seaberths with leecloths aren't necessary.
The resultant noise and slamming when underway is not something that can be easily ignored.
Catamaran Sailboats Underway
The windage of these bungalow-proportioned multi hulls has lead to the catamarans' reputation as a poor windward performer, and this is particularly so when reefed down in heavy weather.
Some, like the the magnificent example shown above, are manufactured from hi-tech materials - carbon composite hull, carbon masts...
Also, the rapid variations in speed and the effects these have on the apparent wind direction, mean that wind vane self-steering systems find it very difficult to keep multi hulls on a straight course
But a properly designed catamaran from the board of a designer unconstrained by the requirements of the charter market can make a fine cruising boat.
Under power, a catamaran's maneuverabilitycan be remarkable.
But as a monohull man myself, it does seem a bit strange to have a sliding patio door on a sailboat. Where's the potted plants?
Or Maybe a Trimaran?'
As a pure sailing machine, a cruising trimaran will beat a cruising catamaran sailboat of the same length hands down.
But squeezing the same number of berths into the trimaran of a similar length will mean that the living accommodation below will be disappointing.
To all, that is, but a small crew that enjoy sailing really fast and are willing to accept spartan living conditions below decks.
Don't forgettochoose your marine products hereat Raritan Engineering, where we have the answers to your marine supply questions.
viaPromoting Offshore Multihull Sailing
Electric Toilets Experts Discuss Popular Power Boats On Today's Market
Your Electric Toilets Professionals Share Great Pointers Before Buying Your First Power Boat
Raritan Engineering yourelectric toiletsdistributors would like to share with you these topics we thought would be of interest to you this month regarding the popular boats out on today's market.
Your electric toilets suppliers continue the discussion regarding how coastal surfers are seemingly on a continuous quest to find the perfect wave. Wakesurfers, though, don't have the same issue. All they need is the right boat and they can ride a clean, powerful wave until the boat's fuel tank hits E.
Supreme S226
Your marine head unit experts share how the Supreme S226 creates a fun wave that can be adapted to suit riders of all ages and skill levels. Besides that, with its pickle-fork bow and custom vinyl wrap, it's a boat that will turn heads on the water.
We surfed the S226 with three people on board, the QuickFill ballast and Plug and Play bags full, and the bow tank empty. The boat created a lengthy wave with good power and a good-size lip that made for fun carving.
The boat is well-suited for those on board too, with room enough for 14 people and all their gear. The swiveling helm seat with flip-up bolster puts the driver firmly in command.
Malibu Wakesetter 22VLX
Our in-house surfing consultant described the wave behind the Malibu Wakesetter 22VLX as ridiculous. By employing Integrated Surf Platform (ISP) technologies, the Wakesetter produced a super-tall wave with a clean face that extended far back behind the boat.
What are some other important amenities? The stainless-steel G3.5 tower quickly raises and lowers, and it comes with swiveling board racks, Wet Sounds speakers and LED lighting.
During our testing, we recorded a top speed of 36.7 mph and noted its crisp handling during tow-sports maneuvers.
Heyday WT-2
When Heyday introduced the original WT-1, it announced to the water sports world that you can generate a killer wave behind a boat that doesn't cost six figures to buy. Your marine cylinder heads professionals give further information regarding how the WT-2 is the brand's follow-up - it's 3 feet longer than the WT-1, and the helm console now sits to starboard rather than in the center.
The interior is still meant to please a surfing crowd. Adjacent to the motor box are the new hot tub lounges, with curved bottoms designed to cradle a pair of observers as close to the wake action as possible.
Your Electric Toilets Specialists Equip You With All the Tools You Need to Make the Best Purchase
See your choice of electric toiletshere at Raritan Engineering, where we always take care of your marine supply needs.
Tig RZX3
Tig designed the RZX3 to carve large, clean surf waves and also create pro-level wakeboard wakes during every session. Your electric toilets manufacturers talk about how the Raptor by Indmar 440 engine propelled this boat to a respectable top speed of 37 mph, and it posted 2.6 mpg efficiency at cruising speed.
Centurion Ri237
Centurion optimized the Ri237's running surface to accommodate the highest level of water sports enthusiasts. The modified V-hull smooths the ride to maximize performance on choppy days.
Our test team surfed the Ri237 with three people in the boat and the Ramfill and Plug and Play ballast systems full. The bow and center tanks were empty, the QuickSurf system was in the default mode, and the adjustable CATS was set to zero.
The A24 sports a wake-shaping hull and shares surfing features found on Malibu boats, such as the Surf Gate. Your marine head gaskets specialists discuss how with Surf Gate, the A24 creates a huge, consistent wave that has a ton of push and power, and it's equally impressive on either side without having to move weight around. And now for 2017 the Surf Band is also an option.
Soorder your marine toilet parts hereat Raritan Engineering. You can count on us to take care of all your marine supply needs.
viaSix of the Hottest Wake and Surfboats
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Marine Toilet Specialists Discuss Why The Need to Avoid Distraction
Your Marine Toilet Distributors Talk About Safety Awareness Tips While Boating
Raritan Engineering yourmarine toiletexperts would like to share with you these topics we thought would be of interest to you this month regarding the need to avoid distractions while boating.
TheNational Highway Traffic Safety Commissionsays that sending or reading a text takes your eyes off the road for five seconds. Your marine toilet professionals share why on waterways across the country, recreational boaters know that five seconds is a world of time to get into trouble.
Good news/bad news:Cellphones are the primary communication device for many boaters, said BoatUS Foundation Assistant Director of Boating Safety Ted Sensenbrenner. So while they're important to all of us, we have to know how to use them wisely."
The stress of it all:Adding to the challenge and unlike automobiles, says Sensenbrenner, is boating's unique stressors of sun, glare, wind, waves and vibration. Research shows that hours of exposure to these boating stressors produces a kind of a fatigue, or "boater's hypnosis" which slows reaction time almost as much as if you were legally drunk.
4 tips to improve situational awareness:Cell phones, alcohol and other factors can hinder knowing what's going on around you, or your situational awareness.
If you'd like to learn more about safe, smart and clean boating, go to BoatUS.org.
See your choice of marine toiletshere at Raritan Engineering where we always take care of your marine supply needs.
Funded primarily by donations from the more than half-million members of Boat Owners Association of The United States (BoatUS), the nonprofit provides innovative educational outreach directly to boaters and anglers with the aim of reducing accidents and fatalities, increasing stewardship of America's waterways and keeping boating safe for all. A range of boating safety courses including 34 free state courses can be found at BoatUS.org/courses.
Many of us enjoy fishing, jet skis, or simply relaxing on a boat. In Texas alone, there are more than 595,000 registered boats. Whether onboard a sailboat, motorboat, paddleboat, or another type of personal watercraft, the operator must be extremely careful.
While distracted driving accidents on our nation's roadways have become an epidemic and gained national attention, many boaters do not remember the same safety rules when they take their driving off the road and into the water.
Boating accidents are frequently caused after drinking alcohol. They are often caused when an inexperienced or unlicensed operator is driving the boat, operating the boat while distracted by a mobile device or another activity, operator inattention, or driving too fast. Boating while intoxicated is a criminal offense.
Operator error, distraction, and intoxication are unfortunately not limited to recreational watercraft use alone. Professional captains have been caught using cell phones during fatal collisions.
Distracted boating is as dangerous as distracted driving. No matter what or where you are driving, pay attention to your surroundings, use common sense, and don't text and drive.
So don't forget topurchase your marine items hereat Raritan Engineering. We will answer all of your marine supply needs.
viaThe Five Seconds That Can Get a Boater Into Trouble
viaDistracted Boating: Is It as Dangerous as Distracted Driving?
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Boat Toilets Professionals Give Helpful Mildew Prevention Tips
Your Boat Toilets Specialists Talk About Effective Cleaners For Getting Rid of Mildew
Raritan Engineeringwould like to share with you this week some amazing tips on how to prevent mildew.
We tested the most effective cleaners for mildewed fabrics in 2009 and published a follow-up on long-term treatments in 2015. In the 2015 test, we were delighted to discover that some DIY formulas and common pool treatments like Clorox Algae Eliminator can do as well as pricey store bought miracle-cures.
Canvas dodgers and biminis are the hallmark of a cruising yacht, keeping the sun at bay and allowing the crew to dodge the worst of the weather. Canvas also protects sails, windows, and machinery.
Clorox Pool and Spa Algae Eliminator proved to be an inexpensive cleaner/protectant.
For maximum water repellency, boat owners could use impervious waterproof fabric instead of canvas, but that typically isn't a good idea. Waterproof sail covers hold moisture, mildewing sails more quickly.
If cleaning mildewed sails is among your biggest cleaning chores, check out my previous blog post Dealing with Dirty Sails.
This Advisor discusses tactics and measures you can employ in what amounts to a continuous fight. Once you get a handle on it, your cabin will smell a whole lot fresher-and those itchy eyes and that mysterious cough that you may have been experiencing might just go away too.
Cowl-style ventilators help to circulate air below decks.
Your Boat Toilets Suppliers Share Why Ventilation is So Crucial to Mildew Prevention
To prevent mold and mildew, you need to ensure that your boat is well ventilated. Your boat toilets distributors offer useful tips that explain why this can be as easy as opening hatches or portholes to create cross ventilation. But for times when you are away, you will need to rely on either active or passive ventilators to keep the moisture level down.
Check out our boat toiletsat Raritan Engineering and see how we always take care of your marine supply needs.
Take a proactive approach
Controlling mold is a continuous battle that requires a multi-pronged, proactive approach. I say control, because you will never entirely eliminate mold and mildew from your boat.
Following is a general plan of action for removing existing mold and mildew, and once it is removed, to keep it at bay.
Step One: Remove the Mold
To remove mold and mildew, try using a solution of bleach, water, TSP (Tri-Sodium Phosphate) and powdered laundry detergent mixed in the following proportions: Four quarts of freshwater, one quart of bleach, 2/3 cup TSP and 1/3 cup of laundry detergent.
Mildew Stain Remover
Among the best of the bleach-based products is Star brite's Mildew Stain Remover. Offered in a 22-ounce trigger spray bottle, it gives you the ability to direct the spray into hard-to-reach areas, such as under quarter berths, or up into chain lockers.
In either case, use the product liberally, taking care to spray it into hidden, hard to reach areas. Sop up any runoff from these products with some rags, which you will need to dispose of at the end.
Step Two: Fumigate
M-D-G Mildew Control Bags eliminate mold with a penetrating vapor.
After removing the mold, follow up with one of the MDG products by Star brite. These products use chlorine dioxide technology to create a penetrating vapor that kills mold along with the odor that it creates.
Step Three: Apply a Mildew Blocker
Although mildew blockers work only temporarily, applying one will give you a temporary leg up in what amount to a continuous battle. According to Practical Sailor, one that works reasonably well is 3M's Marine Mildew Block.
Reduce Moisture with Calcium Chloride Crystals
Star brite, DampRid and MaryKate all offer systems that employ calcium chloride crystals to remove moisture from the air. In some cases, the moisture gets deposited into a reservoir, as with DampRid's Easy-Fill Moisture Absorber or the No Damp Ultra Dome by Star brite.
Propane and Diesel Cabin Heaters and Stoves
To prevent this, when using a propane or diesel cabin heater or stove, open your boat's hatch to let the combustion gasses escape, which is something you should do anyway to limit the possibility of carbon monoxide poisoning.
Click here to get marine toilet partsat Raritan Engineering. We always take care of your marine supply needs.
viaPreventing Mildew in Marine Fabrics
viaCombating Moldand Mildew on Boats
Marine Heads Suppliers Share Reasons Why Positive Rudder Angles Are So Important
Your Marine Heads Manufacturers Gives Great Tips On Improving Your Rudder Angles
Raritan Engineering yourmarine headsdistributors would like to share with you topics we thought would be of interest to you this month regarding the importance of positive rudder angles.
Your marine heads distributors talk about why a big piece of the speed loop that's often overlooked, especially in smaller boats, is rudder angle. I was recently chatting with main trimmer Warwick Fleury about_ Alinghi 100_, the winning boat in the 32nd America's Cup. They sailed this boat when it was new for some time thinking it was perhaps not a step forward. Then one day, they put up a jib that was built for a different rake than the normal rake. All of a sudden, the boat started winning speed tests and eventually won the Cup. We had a similar situation at Luna Rossa with an older boat. Everything possible had been tested, from rudders to keels and masts to structures. It was not a very fast boat. Then we moved the mast forward a few inches, and the boat came alive. The gain from getting the balance correct was bigger than anything else we tested.
So amid such talk about optimum rake for various boats, how can you tell when you've really nailed it-that it's just right? Your GTA 5 submarine parts suppliers discuss how the answer can often be found in the amount of helm you're carrying. In very general terms, you want to sail upwind with an angle of attack of about 5 to 7 degrees. The angle of attack is the sum of your rudder angle and the amount of leeway you're making (see diagram).
How much leeway does your boat make? It can be tough to figure this out; you can measure forever and still not account for things such as current, waves, boat speed, and angle of heel.
Your Marine Heads Specialists Discuss Further Why It Is Important to Consider Different Tactics
Don't forget tobrowse our selection of marine headsat Raritan Engineering, where we always take care of your marine supply needs.
Your marine heads experts share the point that once you have a sense for the amount of leeway your boat makes, the next step is to find out where the tiller is, relative to the boat's centerline, when the rudder is lined up with the keel or centerboard. Just because the tiller is centered, don't assume the rudder is, too. I've found that the tiller will almost always be off to one side or another.
Once you know where the tiller is when the rudder is centered, you can create some benchmarks. Your marine parts source manufacturers talk about how with the tiller locked in the rudder-centered position, rotate the tiller extension so that it is 90 degrees from the tiller. Put a mark on the tiller extension (if its length is not adjustable, use the end of it) and then put a corresponding mark on the side of the deck, directly under it (see diagram inset).
It's helpful to know your rudder angle in situations other than when sailing upwind. Whenever you're accelerating out of a tack or accelerating on the starting line, you need to have your rudder on, or close to, centerline. You can use the marks you put on the deck to confirm its location.
Even downwind you want some positive helm, especially if you're not sailing dead downwind. Your marine parts express professionals share how that at any time you're hiking or planing on boats with asymmetric spinnakers, you're generating side force.
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viaThe Power of Positive Rudder Angle
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