Saturday, June 28, 2008

Sail: Out of the Gate

Took the boat out the gate this weekend.
Sent Wendy up the mast again to sort out the lead line that had snagged in the sheave when I tried to change out the frayed halyard.

BBQd at the dock.
Got a late start and didn't leave the dock until about 2:30. Missed slack at 3 and fought the tide all the way up Raccoon Straight to get to the gate at max flood at 6.

Wendy, Stu, Yoichiro, Jordan, Dana.




















Friday, June 27, 2008

Directions From Space


View Larger Map

Directions:

  • Emeryville Marina is on Powell St., which has its own exit on 80/580. However, it is not possible to take this exit when travelling North on 880 from the East Bay or West on 580. Either take the next exit and find your way back to Powell St or (easier) take 980 and exit as it merges with 880.

  • Drive as far down Powell St. as its is possible to go and park. My boat is at the very last dock.

  • Someone will need to let you in at the gate. Call me when you arrive.



What to bring:

  • Dress for skiing. (Layers, gloves, hat, sunscreen, sunglasses, fleece, windproof/waterproof pants/jacket). You'll be too hot or too cold at some point.

  • A lifejacket if you have one.

  • Camera.

  • Sneakers (with non-marking soles if you've got them).

  • Food (we usually break out the grill for lunch) and your favorite beverage. People bringing hot drinks to share get bonus points.

  • Bring a lifejacket if you have one. (The boat has two good spares and a bunch of very uncomfortable others)



Safety tips.

  • Stay on the boat.

  • Don't step on the lines.

  • Keep fingers out of winches.

  • Duck.

Tuesday, June 17, 2008

Chart datum, GPSs and WGS84

When we were sailing with Andreas on Saturday, he mentioned that his Garmin GPSMap constantly reported himself to be somewhere else while he was sailing in the British Virgin Islands. The error was a constant shift in position.

It must be pretty disturbing to look up your position on the chart and frequently find that you are not there.

His problem reminded me of the the RYA courses that I took in the UK before moving out West. In these, it was part of out boat's checklist to ensure that the boat's GPS (which at that time only reported longitude and latitude, and didn't come with a chart plotter), agreed with the boat's chart's datums. I've never had to do such a thing in the USA and so was prompted me into a bit of revision:

WGS84

Most charts predate GPS and no widespread accurate means of establishing a latitude and longitude that accounted for the wobbles in the shape of the Earth existed at the time they were made. With the advent of GPS, a neat grid may be laid over the surface of the Earth with great accuracy. The latest, and most widely recognized standard version of this grid is called WGS84 (World Geodetic System, 1984) is the one all modern GPSs report as their default position.

Charts predating GPS plot their positions on a variety of other grids, called the chart's position datum. Over 100 datums are in regular use in marine charts, and most GPSs can be programmed with the chart's datum to correct for the disagreement with its calculated WGS84 position.

All good marine GPSs have the ability to correct the positions they report to the chart datum. This is an essential feature for a variety of reasons. Over 100 chart position datums are in use, but the agreed new standard is WGS84. Some chart datums disagree with WGS84 by as much as 30" (or one half of one nautical mile). For locals, this is the difference between being anchored in Paradise Cove, or adrift the shipping lanes.

In most parts of the world, it is essential that you check the chart's datum when plotting a latitude and longitude obtained from a GPS (or any other source).


The USA, The Centre of the Universe and WGS84

In 1884, at the International Median Conference, Washington, DC, the Greenwich Prime Meridian in London, after several centuries of use, was formally defined to be 0 degrees Longitude by a vote of the 25 countries attending (only France abstained from voting, continued to use Paris as their Meridian for several decades before seceding to the Greenwich standard). This established the Greenwich Prime Meridian as the place where time began.

Differences from the Greenwich Prime Meridian are in part what chart datums measure.

Today, if you take a GPS receiver to the bronze markers laid in concrete at the Greenwich Observatory that define the Greenwich Prime Meridian, you'll be disappointed to find that your GPS, if it is set to the its default datum of WGS84, will report that you are 100 metres East of the Meridian. (That's 336.3 feet.)

Why? Because, WGS84 (a US Department of Defense standard) was derived from the older 1927 North American Datum which in turn agrees with the Paris Meridian. Even though this has long since been abandoned by rest of the world, including the French, and disagrees with centuries of work constructing charts with Greenwich as their datum, it did mean that the USDoD didn't need to reprint all of its own charts, rather than correct their error.

There's something a little sad about this. 25 countries met to agree upon a global standard which been a cornerstone of maritime safety for centuries, while WGS84 was reached by no such consensus. With the rise in popularity of GPS, it seems like the rest of the world will just have to suck it up.

http://www.sailtrain.co.uk/gps/positions.htm
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/WGS84
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prime_Meridian
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/International_Meridian_Conference

Monday, June 16, 2008

Through-Hull Leak (Maybe)

Before I left the boat yesterday, I noticed that some water had collected in the bilge over the weekend's sailing. I checked all of the through-hulls and found that the one from holding tank is (very) slowly weeping water. Last night I taped tissue paper marked with felt-pen around the bottom of ball valve to try and see if the water is coming from the through-hull or the ball valve. The lack of ink-bleeding on the paper today indicates that valve is (probably) fine. This is a bit of a shame since the valve is brand new (was replaced at my haulout in March) and now I wish I'd also replaced the through-hull too. I suspect my yard damaged the through-hull seal when they twisted off the old ball-valve which had become pretty rusty.

Also, unlike the valve, replacing the through-hull involves cutting out a section of the hull and so requires re-hauling the boat. Bah!

There's a chance that the through-hull isn't actually leaking. At least it seems to have stopped today. Its possible that the water is from another source and had just collected around the wooden backing plate of the through-hull while we were healed over while sailing.

Either way, the backing plates look pretty damp and should probably be replaced. I'm also considering temporarily sealing up the through-hull with caulk or 5200 (which wouldn't require a haul-out). I have no immediate use for it since I don't plan on any long coastal trips where it would be legal for me to pump the sewage straight out (and would prefer not to do that in any case, not least because of the stink it makes).

Maintenance List

Here's what's still to do...

  1. Replace boom sheaves and pin

  2. Seal/repot quadrant mount screws in cockpit sole to fix leak

  3. Repair/replace dodger weather cover

  4. Tie pegs to through hulls

  5. Annual service of winches

  6. Change oil and oil filter

  7. Change secondary fuel filter

  8. Buy size 12 hose clamps [done. 6/22/2008]

  9. Replace access panels in cockpit (backstay pump and emergency tiller) with plastic panels and latches

  10. Repair cockpit grate

  11. Enlarge hole in cockpit grate around manual bilge pump [done. 6/22/2008]

  12. Tighten lowers [done 6/29/2008]

  13. Move propane tank to stern locker [done. 6/16/2008]

  14. Varnish topside wood

  15. Clean bilge [done. 6/7/2008]

  16. Clean water tanks [done. 6/7/2008]

  17. Install CO and fire alarms [done. 6/22/2006]

  18. Install check valve for holding tank vent (how to stop water entering without blocking vent?)

  19. Rewire propane sniffer to main breaker

  20. Install sump pump for shower drain

  21. Seal leak at cockpit door threshold

  22. Seal leak(s) at fillers

  23. Seal leak at cockpit vent

  24. Sign up to bottom cleaner service [done. 6/28/2008

  25. Purchase bell

  26. Mount waste management plan [done. 6/1/2008]

  27. Lube rudder post

  28. Top up battery water [nothing to do. 6/22/2008]

  29. Send off spare heat exchanger for service

  30. Sort out a reefing system that works [done. See Wendy's method]

  31. Fix no AC to some outlets

  32. Get a good GPS solution

  33. Seizing for shackle pins

  34. Lube up furler [done. didn't help]

  35. Replace furler bearings

  36. Inspect/replace raw water impeller

  37. Inspect all hose clamps

  38. Inspect/replace engine electrical wiring

  39. Replace scummy fresh water hoses

  40. Repair/replace Lifesling bag

  41. Repair cockpit grate

  42. Through hull appears to have developed a trickle. Monitor. Replace at haulout.

  43. Find out what trashed the new halyard. Resplice.

  44. Shorten manual bilge pump hose to keep it away from float switch. [done. 6/22/2008]

  45. Fix wiring to compass light [done. 6/22/08]

  46. Add latches to cockpit lockers

  47. Add hook to keep refrigerator door open

  48. Remove disused cabling

  49. Add whipping to lines

  50. Add nylon grates to stern lockers

  51. Teflon lube all turnbuckles

  52. Install distribution panel and fuses for always-on items (bilge, fridge, propane)

  53. Install cable covers to DC wiring to inverter



Nice to haves....

  1. Check out spinnaker equipment

  2. Lead main halyard to cockpit

  3. Run traveller linesinto cockpit

  4. Windlass

  5. Wireless anemometer

  6. Larger propane tank

  7. Dry and paint bilge

Sunday, June 15, 2008

Sail: Sunday Fun

Saturday, Wendy, Scott and I went out one of the club's club Catalina 36s with Andreas who was completing his second OCSC big boat charter. The weather turned out beautiful. Sunny with gusts 15-25kts. Berkeley->Angel Island->Golden Gate->City Front->Berkeley. We also passed by the hills at Belvedere Cove. The houses there are amazing - built into the steep hills that rise out of the bay. Several of them are four stories tall has each has winding paths, ladders and tracks that lead down to private jetties where the rich and famous kept their yatchs. Reminds me of Salcombe on the South coast of Devon near where my folks live.

The kite boarders were out in force for the U.S. Kiteboarding National Championships. It looked like there were at least 30 kites buzzing around in front of Crissy Field looking like flock of party balloons.

After we got back. we checked out Trader Vic's near our marina. Its a Tiki restaurant which claims to have invented the Mai Tai. Pretty disappointed. Valet only parking (would be quicker, more convenient and pleasant to walk the 20 steps to the lot to get to your car instead of having to pay to queue), pricey and the food, drinks and service were all disappointing. Later, we went back to Berkeley. Got toasty next to the bonfire the staff had fired up after work and watched the sun go down behind the gate.

We had a lazy day on Sunday. Slept in on the boat. Breakfast. Pump out and fuel up. Debbie and her friend Marianne came by after noon bringing supplies for the grill (and some badly needed toothbrushes). After lunch, we tried servicing the furler, unfurling the sail, dropping the jibs, spraying in a ton of McLube into the bearings and rewinding the furler. Nothing seemed to help much. Still pretty squeaky. Will have to look into replacing the bearings.

We had an awesome sail in the afternoon. Wind felt to be in the mid 20s. We left Emeryville and went clockwise around Treasure Island. Wendy seems to have nailed reefing our main -- hoisting up the boom high on the #2 reef line before tensioning #1 and then snugging the vang seems to be the way to get the foot nice and tight. We sailed up to the ball park in San Francisco and terrorized the ferry boats taking the Oakland A fans back to where they came from. I'm making it my mission to get North Star on TV at the ball game -- they frequently feature the boats that hang out outside the ballpark and listen to the game. Need to set TiVo. Had to put in quick gybe to steer out of the path of one of the ferries. Somehow if left Wendy and Debbie collapsed on the cockpit floor as they sheeted in the main.

Very nice having an all women crew. Great crew, and better to look at than the Dudes.

Life is good...


When we got back, we found that the top of the jib halyard had been somehow shredded. Possibly it jumped the sheaves at the top. It could also be that the halyard wraps around the forestay when we furl the jib. Could also be that it might not be led correctly down the mast and chafes on the through-bolts that secure the standing rigging. We rigged the spare halyard that Russ had spliced. Need to cut the end off the one we took off and re-splice an eye.

Saturday, June 07, 2008

Newport 41 Raft Up

We took the boat out again. Very low tide today. The bar alongside the Emeryville channel looked like you could walk across it. We sailed from Emeryville out to Angel Island where we picked up a mooring and met Good Grief for lunch.

The mooring field at Angel Island here is set up for bow and stern mooring. Eric rigged the Happy Hooker to a stern cleat and picked up the stern mooring at the bow. With that attached, it was easy to motor forward to the stern mooring, stopping ourselves from running over it by adjusting the stern line.

Russ and Maureen arrived a little while later and we rafted up.

This was our first raft up and I think that our technique worked pretty well:

  • Set fenders and prepare a long stern line on the downwind side.

  • Have the arriving boat prepare a long bow line on the opposite side on their boat.

  • Have the arriving boat pull up from downwind, bring their bow to your fenders, and exchange lines from their bow.

  • Pay out and let the wind blow you apart until you are parallel.

  • Set the length of the stern line to allow the boats to come parallel alongside each other but offset by a 1/3 boat length (i.e. allow sufficient slack to ensure that the rigs don't collide).

  • The arriving boat motors forward and slack is taken up on the bow.

  • Keep in engine in gear until a spring line is secured that prevents parallel motion and the rigs from crashing.


I'm not sure this is exactly what happened, but its what I imagined, and it all turned out very well.

In our case, we were moored bow and stern. If we were anchored or moored at the bow only, the last steps would need to run in reverse: set the bowline to allow the boats to sit offset by 1/3 and run the engine in reverse. This would prevent the engine from pushing the boats over the anchor or the mooring.

Fired up the BBQ for lunch. We drank beer and eat steaks and talked about Newports until Russ and I bored everyone with our boat talk. We headed out towards the gate after lunch. Wendy tipped 9kts reaching across the slot.

The boat felt quite a lot overpowered today. We reefed the jib. It would be nice to find a way of doing this more tidily while headed upwind so that creases don't get wrapped in the furler. Downwind's much easier and tidier, but is not always where you want to be going.

Here's the track Eric made. 26nm.
 

 


Wendy also got some great shots of Good Grief:






 
North Star 


We flushed and refilled the tanks water when we got back. When the tanks were filling, there were a couple of pops, that I assumed was just the tanks flexing. I have two deck water fillers and two tanks that are connected by a valve. Adding water in one side fills one tank. Filling in the other side fills both tanks. When I was filling, the deck filler overflowed, and then the level dropped. I topped off and again and the level dropped again. I figured that this was just water moving from one tank to another. It wasn't until Wendy found a small river running into the bilge that we discovered that one of the water hoses in the shower had popped out of one of the foot pumps. My yard had taken apart the cabinet that this was attached to in order to fit new ball valves. I figure that, along with poorly tightening the clamps for the pressure water system, they also didn't tighten the hose clamps for the shower footpump. I should really had checked over all of the hose clamps. It would be a good idea to make it part of regular maintenance checklist.

Also, some of the hoses looks pretty rank. Will make a point to replace them.

Thursday, June 05, 2008

GPSs

I'm still looking around for a good GPS system for the boat.

I liked the look of the color Garmin CSx, especially with their recent plummet in prices. It has a lot going for it: waterproof, rugged, easily attached to stuff with the lanyard, good quality maps, ridiculously long battery life, floats, accepts additional SD cards for unlimited track and waypoint data, USB conectivity, etc, etc.

Then Garmin brought out the Colorado 400c. While it looks sexier, has prettier graphics and a fancy jog wheel, many of the user reviews complain that the Colorado is a step backwards in many ways from the previous model: http://garmincolorado.wikispaces.com/Review
Big issues include the poorer readability due to poor backlight (despite a higher resolution screen), and the lack of a lanyard (duh!), and it doesn't float (which is a nice feature for expensive handheld boat electronics).

I may be better off with a binnacle mounted unit rather than a handheld. These have the added advantage of being permanently wired to my VHF for DSC emergency position transmission. However, having something non-portable means that I'd need a second GPS to work as an anchor alarm.

It also comes with a wireless capability for transmitting data to other Colorado units. Its too bad it doesn't wirelessly connect to a PC (where I can install a descent chart plotter with up-to-date maps), or wirelessly talk to a boat's NEMA system (to drive my auto-pilot and run to my VHF). Its hard to think what the rationale for this feature was. Unless you happen to be at a Garmin cult convention it seems pretty useless. It could so easily be awesome.

Closed systems suck!

Wednesday, June 04, 2008

GPS Track

Eric sent the GPS track from last Saturday's sail:
 

Tuesday, June 03, 2008

PHRF Ratings

Local PHRF Ratings: http://www.sailors.com/sfbay/racing/phrf-sf.html

The Newport 41S rates 108, about the same as a Swan 41,
and much, much slower than an Olson 40 (rates 48). North Star is a slightly different model and (I imagine) has slightly more sail area due to the lower boom and probably rates a couple of points lower.

Sunday, June 01, 2008

North Star Dude Sail (No. 1)

Wendy's back from Santa Cruz. We stayed over on the boat Friday night and cooked for the first time. Happy to find that most of the house systems are working well. Dinner was a success.

On Staurday, we took out my regular sailing buddies, Eric and Patrick, and also my housemate Meghan. Went up to Richardson Bay and picked up a rank seaweed soaked mooring. Wind probably up in the mid 20's. The boat performed very nicely for the most part. Got 7kts+ up wind and 9.5 downwind. Need to fix the outhaul sheaves so I can get good tension. Got out the BBQ for lunch.

A couple of us used the head at lunch time. We thought the stink was just Eric but it turns out the the holding tank vent doesn't have a check valve. We sunk the rail a couple of times on the way up to Richardson Bay and the tank must have filled with Bay water.

Tried to put in a reef after lunch and found that its difficult to get good tension on the luff, despite Eric's hard work. Less friction in the sheaves might help.



Photos:




Lube it up Eric!

Other caption suggestions please...


We made our first poop-pump out in the evening after we got back.

We were finding the that the pressure water pump was running for a few seconds every 10 minutes or so. That and water in the bilge pointed to a leak which Wendy tracked down on Sunday morning. Looks like the yard disconnected one of the hoses to the pressure water pump and didn't put it back together too well. Cut off the end of the house, new clamps and it was as good as new.

We also found a pinhole leak in the deck where a screw securing a cabinet partition had been drilled too deep. Wendy plugged it up with Life Seal on Sunday. Probably need to be epoxied eventually.