Tintin
Well-Known Member
On the hook up the Fal/Helford................Oh happy days![]()
+1, or off Trefusis, moving elsewhere when the wind is wrong.
On the hook up the Fal/Helford................Oh happy days![]()
or off Trefusis, moving elsewhere when the wind is wrong.
Sorry I missed your call, try me again tmrw, lived here most of my life, know whats going on around (a bit!) and now work with my partner in the arts industry.
Comrade Red, I checked out the other side of the river on my last day before heading back north, wow, what a beautiful side of Falmouth!![]()
floebs;3223178 Thank you all for all your help with where to look and who to contact. I couldnt have done it without you!! :D[/QUOTE said:More than welcome. Its what sailing & places like this are all about. Helping one-another by passing on experiences, skills & knowledge.
Enjoy your life aboard. Gotta be better than living in digs with a load of snotty nosed pluke faced students
Dont think you will be short of friends & visitors.![]()
It's not Falmouth this side of the river, and the natives are not friendly either.
More than welcome. Its what sailing & places like this are all about. Helping one-another by passing on experiences, skills & knowledge.
Enjoy your life aboard. Gotta be better than living in digs with a load of snotty nosed pluke faced students
Dont think you will be short of friends & visitors.![]()
Re heating, my experience of Eberspachers is they don't like being run on red diesel and on low heat setting for extended periods through the winter, they coke up badly and spares are very expensive. You'll almost certainly need a mains charger permanently connected to run it. If you run it on white diesel and on full heat you'll maybe get away with little or no maintenance but that use doesn't suit liveaboard, you'd end up spending a fortune on diesel. If you've got mains electricity oil-filled rad is OK, that's what I have now on my Vega (27ft), a 1.5kw one.
If I was going to live on the hook I'd have a Refleks heater, see here.
I've found solar to be better value for money than wind, if you don't yet have a wind genny I'd invest in more solar if you can reasonably fit them.
Other ones I've considered are the Origo Heatpal/Heatmate 5200 alcohol heaters, but they produce moisture and need ventilation (carbon monoxide), and tilley lamps (hot but noisy). The modern electric blankets are a godsend when it's really cold and you have mains electricity, though they use very little. I also put a woolly hat on before I'll put the heating on...
Wow djbreeze, what a wealth of heating info this is! - I hadnt really known all the alternatives and the ins and outs of each, so having this as a primer is really helpful!
The more I hear about the ebber, the more I'm turned off by it, and as I still need to connect all the parts onboard, I'm starting to think about pulling it out and starting from scratch with something else. Before I do that though, one last totally random question on the ebber front…. does anyone know how they (and if they) run on bio diesel?
I'd love a refleks (or similar) - but cant really work out where I might mount one onboard - as you probably already know space is pretty tight on a 27ft - so having something moveable, like an oil filled rad somehow seems more workable. Mine is a 1000w with a thermostat dial.
Thanks for the heads up on the solar versus wind - I still have to buy a wind genie, so maybe switching to buying another solar instead would be far better. I have room - although I might start to look like a floating dalek before too long!!
I had thought about a Tilly lamp - noisy yes, but somehow a nice noise! Does anybody know if burning paraffin/kerosene produces moisture? Or needs ventilation?
Maybe that is for another thread, but thought I would ask on the off chance!
Time to start looking at leccy blankets - seems that its the 'must have' item for living aboard!! Already have a vast selection of woolly hats!
Thanks again djbreeze, extremely helpful, and the links open up all kinds of options I didnt know about too!
Got to be solid fuel, surely? Wood or coal or both. Peat from Trago, as well as coal.
You are begining to realise that without solid/diesel/paraffin heating, you are going to need mains leccy ... nobody has yet mentioned gas, with a catalytic element fire, they are excellent heaters and dont give out lots of moisture.
If you could manage a smallish solid fuel heater, that would be my bet for a heater all year round, as wood is easy to come by around Falmouth and anywhere really, chopping it into wee bits for a smallish heater will generate enough heat on its own!!
I would also mention if you have mains in winter, a low wattage slow cooker is also a godsend, you can prep, low cost meat and veg and have a hot healthy stew/thick soup to scoff after you come back from uni/pub.
With a Eber, if you run it on paraffin for a couple or three gallons, every month or so, it cleans up (carbon) a treat.
Here's a good heating a small boat thread. Onto cooking, pressure cookers are great as well, I have a big one and a little one, really saves on gas, and a boaties frypan is another essential...
Wish I'd known how chap 'leccy blankets are. Hot water bottles are possibly one of the best friends of the winter liveaboard. But enough of winter moans, just wait til the summer and the sun, warmth, swimming, fishing, rowing the dinghy to the pub/work/uni, bbqs on the beach, even tho' I've gone back to living in a house for this winter, first spring day will see me back on board like a shot!
Got to be solid fuel, surely? Wood or coal or both. Peat from Trago, as well as coal.
Some house dweller will be along in a minute to say solid fuel/wood will definitely kill you without fail...A woodstove has killed me every year for the past 15 years....![]()
ccscott49yes, it would seem I'm leaning towards mains leccy, athough I'm not absolutely persuaded yet - still looking for alternatives!!! I did wonder about gas - whether I could somehow use the gas bottle that I have to run my little cooker - using it for heat too, but I think that might be asking for trouble.
I'm liking the slow cooker idea - I have a three tier stove top steamer at the moment but a slow cooker would be the bees knees!
I need to look into that Eber tweak - I had thought that it drew diesel straight from the tank, clearly I still need to learn a bit about how the Eber actually works!!