The countertop:
I'm conducting a small poll here:
On your boat, how often:
A. Do various systems like the AC, fresh water (cold and hot), sink and sink drain, fridge, and stove need maintenance and/or repairs?
1. Never. I have a perfect boat
2. On occasion
3. They all break but never at the same time
4. All broken, gave up long ago
And,
B. How many of these systems are clustered near, under or behind the galley:
1. None. My boat is well engineered and is a joy to work on
2. All of them are in the galley area but ease of maintenance was first priority in the original design
3. All of them are in the galley and I have to lay upside down, stuff myself through an impossibly small opening and use a system of mirrors just to try to vaguely see what I barely reach with one finger of the wrong hand.
4. It's so bad I want to shoot the dummy who designed the systems on my boat
Ok, here's the reason for the poll. I freely admit that my boat maintenance resume doesn't extend much beyond a "gently used" 1986 Hunter 40 (that was an attempt at humor, btw
) but I have helped out buddies doing repairs on various other types, Catalinas, Benes, and a really nice Pacific Seacraft. My experience has been that boat systems by necessity seem to cluster in the most inaccessible spots on the boat, and the boat designers tend to not think about the fact that these systems will eventually need maintenance and/or repair/replacement sometime over the life of the boat so they cover said systems with all sorts of cabinetry and joinery which must be mangled or outright destroyed to access said recalcitrant equipment.
Try and diagram that sentence! I dare ya!
My buddy with the Pacific Seacraft, after figuring out that almost the entire interior of his boat needed to be removed (mangled or destroyed in the process) to access the fresh water pump and leaking plumbing from it to the tank, resorted to just using shore water from a hose on deck when he needed water. Underway all water needs were met exclusively with beer
.
Sliding back on today's topic, I too have uttered the occasional curse and nursed the occasional ouchy trying to fix things, and my boat does seem to have the curse of equipment cluster under the galley. Over the years I tried to relocate things but it just is what it is - lots of the systems tend to coagulate under the galley. As I get older I find myself less and less enthused about contorting myself into a pretzel to do the occasional repair, but how can I prevent this? Can I build a better mousetrap?
Maybe. My plan is to make the entire galley countertop easily removable. One piece, screwed down from the top, lift off, set it aside and all the AC, water systems and plumbing will be reachable from the top. And if I do need more access, strategic parts of the galley will be easy to remove once the top is off. All the while, once assembled the galley will be strong enough to park a tank on it. And functional. And aesthetically pleasing.
So, template made and both top and bottom 1/2" ply pieces cut and test fit:
The hardest part was trimming the the various vertical pieces, all (or most) of which I cut oversize, down to allow for a level countertop. Once in a great while I screw up in reverse:
That's my digital level. Just in case you can't read it:
Sometimes it's better to be lucky than good!
Countertop is off now for epoxying and formica(ing).
Cheers,
Mark