Thanks Charlie,
The only boat I had with a wooden ceiling in it was a Frers 33. It had narrow
strips with beveled edges held in by stainless steel screws which allowed you
to take them out and refinish if required. I tried to attach/enclose a picture
but the site doesn’t seem to allow it to
Thank you.
I was hoping that I might find a source for this material, perhaps from someone
who is familiar with wooden boat construction.
More likely a boat builder, including C&C, made them in house which is likely
what I will need to do.
Thanks again,
Charlie NelsonWater Phantom1995 C&C 36XL
Maybe South Shore?
From: cenelson via CnC-List
Sent: February-01-21 10:08 AM
To: Rod Stright ; 'Stus-List'
Cc: cenelson
Subject: Stus-List Re: FW: Re: Interior 'walls'
Thank you.
I was hoping that I might find a source for this material, perhaps from someone
who is familiar with wo
Expensive replacements are not a requirement: when I purchased my 37, the
sheaves would not turn at all; I removed them (mast down, of course) and used
very fine emery cloth on the sheaves and the axles; they still spin freely
without friction after five years..; I have the old wire sheaves but
Isn’t that like buying a new car when you have a flat tire??
Joe
Coquina
-Original Message-
From: Adam Hayden via CnC-List
mailto:cnc-list@cnc-list.com>>
To: Stus-List mailto:cnc-list@cnc-list.com>>
Cc: CHARLES SCHEAFFER mailto:cscheaf...@comcast.net>>;
Adam Hayden mailto:hayden.a...@hotm
That is an excellent suggestion.
I will give them a call-Rob McLaughlin? was very helpful on past requests for
metal parts.
Plus they are based in Canada so they might know of local sources.
Charlie Nelson
Charlie
Thanks
Sent from the all new Aol app for iOS
On Monday, February 1, 2021, 9:1
In the Chesapeake, there is CHESSS, Chesapeake short handed sailing
society. They run a number of single and double handed races, spin and
non-spin. It was started by a friend on West River who got fed up trying
to put together crew. https://www.chbaysss.org/
I started racing in middle school,
Maybe Noah's here in Toronto. They've been here since C&C was.
http://www.noahsmarine.com/
Dave
33-2
On Mon, 1 Feb 2021 at 09:14, Rod Stright via CnC-List
wrote:
> Maybe South Shore?
>
>
>
> *From:* cenelson via CnC-List
> *Sent:* February-01-21 10:08 AM
> *To:* Rod Stright ; 'Stus-List'
As I install our new Wallas heater, I’m thinking of removing the original Red
Dot that was wire cut by the PO—may need a new fan. At one point, I think it
leaked coolant into the settee cavity. Cleaned up the spill and tightened hoses
after we got the boat. I realize this heater offers steady “f
I'd remove anything that doesn't work and remove it's piping too, so you don't
have to worry about future leaks. You made it redundant by adding the Wallas
heater.
Not sure I understand a Red Dot heater. It uses the engine coolant to heat the
cabin? That's not very useful when you turn off t
Hi Charlie
The 35-3 doesn't use this as the ceiling, but has on the sides a teak
surfaced plywood, maybe 1/4" thick, with grooves formed in it to
simulate it being strips of teak (a better version of the 1979s basement
family room paneling). If we are talking the same thing... I have no
idea
I would have a hard time removing one of those heaters that was already in, the
installation is most of the equation.
There is not much to them, a couple hoses, heat exchanger, and fan – you should
be able to fix/replace that if it is the only problem.
As far as the hoses, for something that im
I see you're also in the PNW, so I would say the decision should be based
on how much cold weather sailing you do, and how much of that is motoring.
We do very little motoring, and are usually not too concerned about warming
the cabin when we are underway, so it doesn't make sense for us. The Walla
Thanks all who have chimed in with thoughts on my 'ceiling' problem.
I spoke with Rob at South Shore today and he recalled that C&C sourced this
material to a local shop who has since gone out of business.
My next, probably last hope, is Noah Boatworks in Ontario per one of the
listers. They do
Hey Charlie, if it is like the panels on my boat you should be able to
get the plugs out reasonably easily, I drilled a small hole in the
center and screwed a wood screw in, it popped the plugs out and I could
remove the screws and thus the panel. I'd go with that before resorting
to a power t
Hey Charlie,
If it just has water stains, is there any way you could sand the damaged wood
where it is and just recoat it with Watco Teak Oil? It's worth a try. I've
cleaned stains off the teak cabinetry on my boat that way. I use a cleaner
like Pinesol first and then lightly sand with 120.
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