Not exactly a Jabsco all-plastic disposable head. Check this baby out ! Whatdaya think @Peggie Hall HeadMistress ??
Counter point to that is the weight you won't be hauling around because your crew will actually use the head.The weight of all that bronze will slow you down Jackdaw.
Zero-sum game.Counter point to that is the weight you won't be hauling around because your crew will actually use the head.
Maybe it’s the weight the crew won’t be hauling around. One less thing to think about.Zero-sum game.
Lake sailor. The weight is still there.Counter point to that is the weight you won't be hauling around because your crew will actually use the head.
- Will (Dragonfly)
Negative: As Thinwater says, Jackdaw sails on the Great Lakes and hence has to use a holding tank. It would just be a weight transfer and the only positive my be that the transferred weight would act more like a ballast. LOLCounter point to that is the weight you won't be hauling around because your crew will actually use the head.
- Will (Dragonfly)
Assuming the waste could be discharged in a no discharge zone, we would need to talk about your crew's dietary habits. They would have to be eh hem, crapping bricks to equal the weight. Of course, bricks could be tossed overboard.Zero-sum game.
It has a Steam Punk look to it.That would look cool in the house bathroom.
Varnish lots of Varnish.Splinter risk
Or there might be a point of diminishing returns, never good in a head.Zero-sum game.
Not sure. The seat and lid of that thing had the gloss and finish of a Steinway piano.Splinter risk in rough seas.
The paradox is, that's where you really need non-skid the most, but it's where you want it the least.Not sure. The seat and lid of that thing had the gloss and finish of a Steinway piano.
I'm 99% certain that what you've found is a meticulously restored A.B. Sands "Sanette" --one of the earliest piston cylinder marine toilets. The attached photo is an ad in a 1930s Motorboating magazine. Wilcox Crittenden bought Sands around 1940. Some of the earliest W-C "Winner" and "Imperial" toilets still have Sands name stamped into the pump.Not exactly a Jabsco all-plastic disposable head. Check this baby out ! Whatdaya think @Peggie Hall HeadMistress ??
View attachment 146934
I'm pretty sure its a Simpson Lawrence - The very nice man the the Barcelona Marine Museum said it was fully restored, and like all S-L heads, they printed their name as the 'target' or drop-zone'. Not a place I'd print MY name!I'm 99% certain that what you've found is a meticulously restored A.B. Sands "Sanette" --one of the earliest piston cylinder marine toilets. The attached photo is an ad in a 1930s Motorboating magazine. Wilcox Crittenden bought Sands around 1940. Some of the earliest W-C "Winner" and "Imperial" toilets still have Sands name stamped into the pump.