Cruising a long distance on a boat with new and unfamiliar electronics as well as new systems, along with sails that have been modified and not tried is not wise. We originally planned to do shakedown cruises on the Chesapeake Bay this past summer, with a long one scheduled for the winter. Not having done our shorter shakedown cruises, we didn't think it was wise for us to take off for a trip to Florida or the Bahamas as our first shakedown. We are back to our original plan, but just a year later.
So we continue to upgrade Abake this winter for what we believe will be our cruising lifestyle. We can't do everything, because we don't exactly know what our liveaboard lifestyle will be. But we can upgrade her with the things we're sure we're going to want -- like a watermaker.
Mike, in between other projects, has been assembling a Kubota DC generator that will charge the house batteries, make water, and freeze the cold plate for the refrigerator. He has most of it assembled and has cut brackets for mounting it. The next step is to weld the bracket pieces together and mount them on the forward bulkhead in the engine room. We're hoping to weld the brackets today.
Adjuster bracket |
Serpentine belt on DC generator |
Angle bracket reading for welding |
Also, while he was cutting formica for the aft sink, he also cut the formica and replaced the dark-colored formica on top of the dresser in the rear cabin. All the plugs were sanded and the rails were re-stained.
New formica on dresser |
When Abake was out of the water for hurricane Sandy, we took the opportunity to move the 3 new house batteries (Lifeline 4D AGM batteries) on board. They've been positioned under the companionway stairs and Mike's been designing the distribution system. That also means that he had to decipher what the current system was in order to remove the unneeded cables. What a chore! There will be quite a bit of re-design because we're adding the Kubota and upgrading the charging system. Abake was never set up for liveaboard cruising (away from shore, or AC power).
Old house bank |
Removing cables |
And, we learned that an upgrade is available for our SSB to keep it from "clipping" (i.e., intermittently dropping the voice while talking). This is a free modification from ICOM, but requires that the radio be sent to Washington state. We had our previous SSB serviced by them and had great results. And, to our favor, the radio had not been mounted on the boat yet, so now it is on it's way to Bellevue, Washington.
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