Elessar
Well-Known Member
I bet the latest one drives batter now than when I drove it last summer in the Med.
Surveyor says it's worth 220% of what it was then so some progress has been made.
Can't wait to show you Mike. You have an open invitation
I bet the latest one drives batter now than when I drove it last summer in the Med.
Hi Mark, cannot believe how much progress you've made already. We should be down at the weekend and will pop over to say hello and have another looksee if that's ok. cheers Gary
did a reply on coding this evening and the thread still said last reply 1408. trying this to bump it........
edit no still sitting right down the thread list for me saying last reply 1408. Same for everyone?
Fab job Mark, and congratulations on the 220% score. Result
I'm confused by some of the coding mods. Were you mgn280 or yellow book? Maybe this just reflects inconsistency among surveyors and my erm track record of arguing when they dont follow the letter of the law, but under yellow book I've never put locks on my below-weather-deck portlights and have relied on the "keep closed" sticker as meeting the rules. Locks are arguably required under mgn280 but not yellow book.
And ref the foredeck hatch I like them rear hinged for ventilation so I've always left them that way round and met the coding rules using a plywood blank, but given your storage issues that may suit you less well than spinning the hatch around (You can't spin it round easily on Sq58 or 78 so that aint an option)
Are those labels done on the Brother connect-to-PC label printer on TZ tapes?
Anyway, superb job you have there. Tell solitaire to take his shoes off and take good care of her![]()
PS, love the decks/white caulking
Excuse my ignorance, but when you are getting a boat coded, does it get inspected, they give you a list of issues that makes it sub-standard , you treat it like a snagging list ie. fix all those issues and get reinspected, then you pass?
Yellow book. The words say not readily openable or something from memory. The result was neat so I was happy, some people replace the knobs with nuts and things like that, which I wouldn't like. There is no doubt that Simon was much stricter on applying every aspect of the code than the chap who did E3, but that's fine I'm feeling good about the boat.
How long did that take you in the end?
Look good though, didn't fancy it as a job mind...
Ther transom took hours. It was a complete b@stard.
The main rubrail is a different profile and easier thankfully.
Exactly right, but more than 2.
Visit 1 he did the hull bottom externally and for the interior just wrote "how big was the bomb?"
Visit 2 long list.
Visit 3 check progress, stability test, short list. Obviously she needs to be in the water for this.
Visit 4 sign off. Actually my new radar reflector hadn't arrived so he saw the receipt and has asked for a photo of it on.
There is then an ongoing process, you agree to keep it in code, annually you sign to specifically say it is still in code and every 3rd year you get a re inspection. That's for boats my size, bigger boats need an annual reinspection
Wow
I wish I'd taken a photo of her hanging in that travel lift in Vinaros last August
It would have been a real "turn up" for the books.
Fantastic Mark - well done.
Mmmm...not what I wanted to hear Mark as my rubrail's missing too and I was thinking it might be an easy replacement! Did you warm it up with hair dryer or hot water?
just kept it warm inside before fitting. It wasn't the flexibility that was the problem, it just keeps popping back out unless you keep pressure on it. So for the 5m or so of rail we put in about 15 or 20.