colind3782
Well-Known Member
Any idea of the price? I just tried calling the number on the website but it's unobtainable.
Very impressive. I'm not sure that I'm brave enough to try it though.![]()
Neat, but in what circumstances could you use it. Most sea cock failures involve jamming usually shut or half open or complete shearing off which, when it happened to me, involved a wooden bung a hammer and a rapid move to a quayside to dry out for the replacement.
Why not - don't you ever clean your log paddlewheel.
No I don't have to clean it because it's ultrasonic. No moving parts, never needs cleaning.
Any idea of the price? I just tried calling the number on the website but it's unobtainable.
Twenty something years ago I used a masthead halyard to careen our Sadler 25 over enough to allow me to change a seacock. A few people in the marina wondered what on earth I was doing...
My 1999 Bene, Ive had a good look at them all. The prop shaft water lube one had some pink on the threads of the thru hull. It had a SS hose clip on it when I bought it, the previous had earthed the engine and anode to it! I have just changed it, I had to cut thru the thread to get it out. The walls of the pink bit were still solid, it was surface discolouring only! It didnt need changing! I am confident the rest are OKAh! the fruits of determined refusal to either use or regularly service your seacocks.
All those owners of French AWBs, have you changed your raw-water seacocks @ year 5?
Reminds me of when I started work at the gas board as a fitting apprentice in 1970, .........Elf and Safety!! Pete
Reminds me of when I started work at the gas board as a fitting apprentice in 1970, the fitters often had to change the main gas inlet valve (next to the meter) which was a snip, just check there were no naked flames and a bit of ventilation, unscrew the old valve and replace it quickly with a new one. But ocasionally a new fitting had to be soldered on to the old live lead main.
There was a expanding tool that went through the old tap and expanded in the lead pipe but the old pipe was usually a bit battered and usually it wouldn't make a good seal.
Some used a flexible wire tool with washers fitted along it's length to stop the gas but it was not unusual for it to be leaking gas out whilst you were soldering the joint.
I was sent with a fitter to be shown how to do it and he just stuffed a strip of wet rag down the pipe and compressed it down with a screwdriver, cut off the old fitting then lit the blowlamp and soldered in a new fitting, this was common in those days, the disconnected meter if uncapped was the classed as biggest danger being potentially a bomb.
Most of these jobs were performed in the corner of a small internal meter cupboard single handed, I am sure there must have been accidents but I never heard of any.
Elf and Safety!!
Pete
This would be good gadget for removing seacocks in good condition but those aren't the ones you want to replace. I can foresee problems like loosening the skin fittings so I wouldn't risk it.
I get rather annoyed when recent Health and Safety legislation is derided. The introduction of the Health and Safety at work Act 1974 has transformed the construction industry so I would ask "what is wrong with protecting working people's lives?"
I agree about risk assessments having done and reviewed hundreds of them. You have to invent risks just to fill the spaces on the form. It is never acceptable to write "there are no risks associated with this activity" even when that is true.