back at it

Oct 25, 2011
115
Hunter 1980 H33-C Annapolis
After a long period of inactivty both on the forum and on the boat (don't make the mistake of thinking a rental property is easy money!) I am pleased to announce that progress has resumed on S/V Redbeard! I moved aboard two weeks ago and have transitioned the project from part-time to full-time utilizing ever spare hour and knocking out projects that couldnt have been feasible cummuting back and forth. I will post some pictures as soon as this software quits giving me a fit.
 

Ed H

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Sep 15, 2010
244
Hunter 33_77-83 Regent Point Marina, Virginia
Sounds good... can't wait to see your pics (and steal your ideas) Ed H
 

braol

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Apr 16, 2014
348
Hunter 27 Rebel 16 Great Lakes Naval Base, IL
Wow! Moving aboard is a great idea. Nothing like having to make the place you are actually living in, liveable. Unfortunately, my boat has no shower (just a solar shower) so I will not be moving aboard anytime soon. (And no pump-out on the dry in the boat yard.)
 
Oct 25, 2011
115
Hunter 1980 H33-C Annapolis
here are some pics of the insulation done to the hull, 3/4" foam was cut to fit between the furring strips (not sure if its called that on a boat, stringers maybe?) previously glassed in, then 1/4" thick mylar foil bubble wrap was stretched across and then was covered in the temporary plaid fabric. Eventually the fabric will come down and wood (undecided species) strips will be attached horizontally. the last picture was my einstein moment on how to keep the beer ICE cold, just dip overboard and periodically snip a few off the bottom with scissors.
 

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Oct 25, 2011
115
Hunter 1980 H33-C Annapolis
FROLI mattress spring system

here are some pics of the FROLI mattress spring system, snaps together very easily and drastically improves comfort and ventilation, not cheap (approx. $300 for the v-berth) but if you plan to stay aboard more than the odd weekend its well worth it
 

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Oct 25, 2011
115
Hunter 1980 H33-C Annapolis
heres a couple pics of cutting new cushions for the v-berth and port settee, the old cushions were in terrible shape and I HATE sleeping on seams, the larger one is a king tempur-pedic mattress topper i found on sale, the other is an ikea futon mattress guts that I'm recycling, the absolute best thing to cuts foam with is a $20 electric turkey knife....
 

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braol

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Apr 16, 2014
348
Hunter 27 Rebel 16 Great Lakes Naval Base, IL
here are some pics of the insulation done to the hull, 3/4" foam was cut to fit between the furring strips....... the last picture was my einstein moment on how to keep the beer ICE cold, just dip overboard and periodically snip a few off the bottom with scissors.
What brand foam was that you used?

Why is it that beer always tastes better when you're on a boat???
 
Oct 25, 2011
115
Hunter 1980 H33-C Annapolis
The brand was "flavor of the day" for the local home depot, but more importantly (the real question) the foam shown was expanded poly styrene wrapped in a mylar foil, basically the same thing as a white styrofoam coffee cup, however after the v-berth I decided to spend the extra money and use the extruded pink variety. In retrospect the denser pink stuff was a way better choice both for ease of installation (the expanded pellets kept getting EVERYWHERE) and because its closed cell i would not worry about it getting wet in the future.

Not sure why beer tastes better of a boat but I can promise some Empirical research to get to the bottom of the issue.....
 
Jun 5, 2010
1,123
Hunter 25 Burlington NJ
Chrome-plated insulation!

I am digging that silver foam insulation stuff. We are building a C44 for a client in south Florida and started putting that stuff all over the boat, under the deck, inside the hull, under the coachroof....

The mistake is believing the advertisers' hype that it adds anything considerable to the R-value; it doesn't; it can't because it requires air pockets to either side to be effective. But what it does much, much better is to passively block heat transfer by virtue of being reflective. It will actually work both ways-- keeping heat out, keeping heat in, especially not allowing one to transfer to the other, so it's good in two seasons or in two climates. This will help cut down on hull sweating ('cold iced-tea glass syndrome') and thus humidity and mold. It is also helpful against sound, no small matter for those of us who sleep so close to the waterline.

I decided on the bubble-wrap stuff at Lowes; this (with the electrical system postponed over the vicious NJ winter) is my next major project.
 
Oct 25, 2011
115
Hunter 1980 H33-C Annapolis
It seems to add alot to the 3/4" foam, mostly due to the fact the each section is one piece where ever possible. I hope the mylar reflects radar as well as it does radiant heat, a friend of mine works as a mate on a tug in the baltimore harbor does ship assist so i plan on anchoring near the channel and getting a 'radar baseline' this summer....