Chiara’s slave
Well-known member
Sorry? Wheres that from?
Was there Friday, and they are charging full wack (not reduced winter rate). They claimed that they needed to because of rising costs. £3.30/m without electric.Come to Yarmouth, it's in with the berthing fee there. And the price for a night isn’t unreasonable. We try to pay them back for their kindness by not taking the piss. We don’t leave a heater running, just put one on when we are there.
I run a Meaco ddl junior 24x7 on humidistat. It has a heater element. It’s consuming 2kw/day and maintaining 60%rh. Have a bar heater on a thermostat switch set at 5deg C, it’s not yet switched on this winter.Just checked our marina electric account. Obviously I am being naive about the increased costs, but a bit of a shock to see our marina (Premiere) charges 32p kw/hr, meaning our small 750 watt cabin heater is costing nearly £6 a day!! I got them to switch it off temporarily while I think of a cheaper way. Probably will replace the heater with a 220 watt dehumidifier on a timer for four hours a day, equating to approx £4.00 a week. How does 32p kw/hr compare with other marinas, much the same I guess.
Really? We are in there on a long term visitor rate , inc power. You might have seen us, right under the office windowsWas there Friday, and they are charging full wack (not reduced winter rate). They claimed that they needed to because of rising costs. £3.30/m without electric.
Stand and deliver!
Packed at this time of year. Fair amount of liveabiards, when we were heater on most evenings and breakfast time.Is the place crammed with people , heaters on, EV's on charge etc
Sounds perfectPacked at this time of year. Fair amount of liveabiards, when we were heater on most evenings and breakfast time.
Don't know about evs.
Free unlimited water too. Plus of course reasonable strength wifi.
I think aiming for 45% RH might be trying to get things too dry, at UK winter temps you could be quite a bit higher and have no risk of mould. Mold Chart for Temperature and Humidity Monitors – Stetten Home Services in my experience above 60% stuff can start to feel a bit damp and it takes longer to get a heat in. I guess if you were hoping to run it hard for 4 hours a day and get the RH low enough that for the next 20 hours it is still below 60% you may need to aim for <45% though. Depending on air temp, size of dehummer, volume of boat, how ventilated it is etc - that might be a challenge.Good question. Our de-humidifier can be run permanently, which I would do for some 4 hours a day, but it has an auto button, with a humidity setting of our choice, and I too wonder what is the best option. Also, what is the best humidity setting, about 45%?
Set it on a timer ( plug into the socket very cheap) , and use only early morning say 3 to 6. Better still use a thermostat and a timer.Just checked our marina electric account. Obviously I am being naive about the increased costs, but a bit of a shock to see our marina (Premiere) charges 32p kw/hr, meaning our small 750 watt cabin heater is costing nearly £6 a day!! I got them to switch it off temporarily while I think of a cheaper way. Probably will replace the heater with a 220 watt dehumidifier on a timer for four hours a day, equating to approx £4.00 a week. How does 32p kw/hr compare with other marinas, much the same I guess.
Last week I visited Waterside Marina, Brightlingsea, and they charged me £2 for which they put 2.75KWh on the meter!Just checked our marina electric account. Obviously I am being naive about the increased costs, but a bit of a shock to see our marina (Premiere) charges 32p kw/hr, meaning our small 750 watt cabin heater is costing nearly £6 a day!! I got them to switch it off temporarily while I think of a cheaper way. Probably will replace the heater with a 220 watt dehumidifier on a timer for four hours a day, equating to approx £4.00 a week. How does 32p kw/hr compare with other marinas, much the same I guess.
That’s a lot more than ours when the boat is left sealed and unattended. Makes sense if you are cooking and doing washing.My Meaco dd8L on a low setting uses about £1 per day in recent use.
Thanks, very helpful. I thought 2 hours in the morning and two hours in the evening might be the way to go. Trial and error I supposeI think aiming for 45% RH might be trying to get things too dry, at UK winter temps you could be quite a bit higher and have no risk of mould. Mold Chart for Temperature and Humidity Monitors – Stetten Home Services in my experience above 60% stuff can start to feel a bit damp and it takes longer to get a heat in. I guess if you were hoping to run it hard for 4 hours a day and get the RH low enough that for the next 20 hours it is still below 60% you may need to aim for <45% though. Depending on air temp, size of dehummer, volume of boat, how ventilated it is etc - that might be a challenge.
Some of the dehumidifiers like to go through a wind down routine. Not sure if it would damage them being shut down twice a day by the timer?Thanks, very helpful. I thought 2 hours in the morning and two hours in the evening might be the way to go. Trial and error I suppose
What's the operating temperature of that device?I use the lowest setting which is 60%rh on my dehumidifier. Just trying to prevent mould, which it has done so far .
View attachment 146266
What's the operating temperature of that device?
Does it still work below 10 degrees C?
Cheers.That's a little unclear from the instructions
The following is from the instructions
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View attachment 146270
Why do you worry about frost protection? Boat is in the sea, frost may land on the deck, but inside is protected by the temp of Seawater, unlikely to see any actual freezing inside.Maybe it’s a daft question but why do you need a heater on the south coast on all or part of the day?
We’re on the west up north and have the heater on a thermostat which comes on at 2c for frost protection only. We also run a dehumidifier at a low setting. As a compressor one it works well enough over 5c. Never any damp issues.
I thought by law they can only charge what the marina pays itself plus a service charge. we are currently paying 17.4p but for how long who knows have not been told, we pay quarterly, and marina is in administration so who knows. we run our Ebberspacher D5 diesel heater an hour each day to take morning chill off and a 1000w fan heater only if needed after that . we have a dehumidifier running 24/7 in 'smart' mode that cuts it in only above a certain humidity level,
Sorry! Spent 1 night in Yarmouth in the summer with Blind Week. The price was EXTORTIONATE, maybe I'm just being a tight northerner?
Good point but it’s fresh(ish) water in the Crinan Canal. Somestimes seen 6” of ice round the boat.Why do you worry about frost protection? Boat is in the sea, frost may land on the deck, but inside is protected by the temp of Seawater, unlikely to see any actual freezing inside.
Damp issues are more likely due to poor ventilation or leaks.