Graham_Wright
Well-Known Member
Are they twins?
I have burned all my tealights and put all flower pots and bread tins in the recycling bin.
Nobody (as far as I have discovered) has mentioned the idea of using engine heat. It heats calorifier water very happily and, like in a vehicle, the engine water could be circulated through a vehicle fan heater. Although you wouldn't want to sleep with a running engine, some of the heat so distributed would presumably remain in the cabin.
As a further step, heating pipes or hoses could be run through lockers.
I can't do the sums but I hate waste.
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I do love it when people would prefer to apply pseudo maths and deeply held beliefs rather than trying the simple experiment for themselves.
the war department suggested using a similar system for taking the chill off anderson shelters - different times of course. However, clearly they knew nothing either.
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... I am beginning to believe that some people enjoy breathing in nano-particles and noxious gases....
I don't mention it, because I tried it and it was not very good.
The engine only heats the calorifier when it is under a reasonable load.
Idling, it produces very little.
I tried it with a VW polo heater on a yanmar 3GM30.
It would be OK if you run your engine under load for decent periods, but my typical 20 minutes of in/out of harbour is just enough to heat a normal size calorifier.
Losing heat to the Polo heater stopped the water getting hot enough for washing up.
I'd be interested in any other experiences?
Life would be different for a motor-sailor.
Some sort of CHP set up, using a small generator to produce a mixture of electric and water heat would be nice, if you could make it as quiet as an eberbasto.
after that it was candles - which as we now know - have a purely psychological effect on the perception of warmth.
Mostly, not purely. There will be a small temperature raise in your boat from the 100W of you and 200W of candle power. This psychological effect is most apparent in the example environment I gave - moonlight in an Antarctic winter, where the temperature change is immeasurably small, but the psychological effect great.
the old volvo (10hp single cyclinder) in the slug (18 feet long) - did a pretty good job of heating the inside of the boat
I reckon it kept the inside of the cabin fairly toasty for the first two hours after stopping for the night. Running it for ten minutes was enough to get it up to temperature.
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...I have burned all my tealights and put all flower pots and bread tins in the recycling bin
D
...On the pilot cutter the Rippingille Prefect has given years of sovereign service. ...Mrs Trellis (Bethesda)
you can't beat a nice warm boat in the winter. Stop being a skin flint and part with £440 and buy one of these. The cheapest proper way to heat your boat when you're away from shore power.
http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/PROPEX-HEATSOURCE-HS2000-BLOW-AIR-HEATER-MOTORHOME-CAMPER-BOAT-CARAVAN-GAS-12V-/231375585737?pt=UK_Campervan_Caravan_Accessories&hash=item35df0f41c9
Glad to hear of it.
Get yourself a decent heater, I can't be doing with nano-particles
On the pilot cutter the Rippingille Prefect has given years of sovereign service. Off Vardo last Easter I was so toasty I was twice down to my underpinnings, even with both butterflies open. The late Mr Trellis would have laughed.
Come to think of it it's a bit warm in here now, still soldier on.
Mrs Trellis (Bethesda)
Propex? Proper? and you call others skinflints, they have one advantage which is capital cost and why they are favored by skinflints./