A
Anonymous
Guest
Re: Hurricane lamps - might as well not bother
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Proper oil fired Anchor lights aren't cheap, but they will see you into your box.
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You could well be right. Aside from the fire risk and the risk of extra flammable liquid stored, if the colour of the flame is close to that of sodium lights then they will probably be mistaken for city lights. The point I was making when starting this thread.
I am now sitting at anchor off Isola Tabarca; there are few sodium lights and no hurricane or other oil lamps here tonight but the yacht 50m away with a masthead tungsten shows up beautifully against the town lights, as do the masthead tungstens of the half dozen yachts 200m - 500m away. The several mobos with anchor lights (necessarily) lower down are much, much harder to see even in an anchorage with few shore lights. You've only got to sit in an anchorage at night and see for yourself. You can easily see masthead lights in your normal field of view right up close.
[ QUOTE ]
Proper oil fired Anchor lights aren't cheap, but they will see you into your box.
[/ QUOTE ]
You could well be right. Aside from the fire risk and the risk of extra flammable liquid stored, if the colour of the flame is close to that of sodium lights then they will probably be mistaken for city lights. The point I was making when starting this thread.
I am now sitting at anchor off Isola Tabarca; there are few sodium lights and no hurricane or other oil lamps here tonight but the yacht 50m away with a masthead tungsten shows up beautifully against the town lights, as do the masthead tungstens of the half dozen yachts 200m - 500m away. The several mobos with anchor lights (necessarily) lower down are much, much harder to see even in an anchorage with few shore lights. You've only got to sit in an anchorage at night and see for yourself. You can easily see masthead lights in your normal field of view right up close.