Google Updates Satellite Imagery!

June 28, 2016

I read this morning that Google has updated the imagery it uses on Earth and Maps by moving from the old Landsat 7 NASA satellite (which suffered a hardware failure in 2003 resulting in gaps in the images), to the new open-sourced Landsat 8 higher resolution images. This should eliminate a lot of areas with clouds.

old-new-closeup

Fulaga, Fiji has been an area with poor coverage. Here’s an animated GIF with the the old and new images.

This is good news and bad news!

“Yo, dude? How can this be bad news? The better the picture, the better it is for navigation!”

The bad news is that now we have to remake (of find) new KAP files! All those hours I put in! Oh well, what else am I going to do? Scrimshaw?! -Rich

Plastic Plumbing Problems

June 27, 2016

image_2014-05-07--9

Before we left California, we installed all new fresh water plumbing. The old polyester reinforced clear PVC tubing in common use was very old and home to, I’m sure, a multitude of algae species. It seemed that everyone was going with the newfangled plastic quick-connect system. It looked to me like it had a lot of advantages:

Easy to install
Very easy to modify
No boiling water to get hoses off barbs
No hateful house clamps (and cuts from those hateful hose clamps)
Long life and maybe less growth
Color coded for hot and cold

With four years of hindsight, I think all of those assumptions turned out to be correct, but there are some negatives that I didn’t anticipate. Some minor and some really annoying! I share these observations hoping that I’ll save some others these headaches.

First, the kind of fittings and tubing we went with were made by Whale. (I’m not saying there’s any particular problem with the Whale fittings – I think others would have similar issues.) Above is a picture of the fittings and tubing I’m talking about.

Here are the issues we’ve had, one by one.

Incompatible Fittings and Tubing: Don’t expect to be able to buy fittings or tubing compatible with these around the world. Even if the size seems correct and the fittings look right, they might not be compatible. We bought tubing and connectors at Burnsco in New Zealand. Everything went together well but when I turned on the water, the tubing blew out of the fittings.

I measured again, re-inserted the tubing and it happened again. I found little rings that can be inserted to lock the fittings. No help. It turned out that the tubing from some manufacturers is harder or softer than others. The NZ variety that I bought was very hard and the locking clamps in the fittings couldn’t hold the hard tubing. The NZ fittings have metal, rather than plastic clamps inside (at least this is my best guess as to the cause.)

With this in mind, I’d say take plenty of extra fittings and tubing.

Don’t Use on the Suction Side: While these fittings are very good at holding pressure, even a slight vacuum, like on the suction side of your water pump, seems to cause an air leak. This can make it very difficult for the water pump to prime after you run out of water. To combat this, I installed the above mentioned lock rings in all the fittings (negating some of the ease-of-use argument as these are very hard to install). This might have helped a little, but it sure didn’t cure the problem.

We finally ended up moving our fresh water pump to a spot in the bow, right behind our water tanks. I removed all the quick fittings from the inlet side and went back to hose. It made things better, but didn’t fix everything. More needed to be done.

Restricted Flow: It seems to me that this tubing, or maybe, or both, offer more resistance to water flow than my old hose did. On the inlet side, this meant that the pump had to work harder to draw water from the tanks. This is very hard on the pump and is obvious as the pump is louder than it should be and vibrates a lot. On the outlet side it meant that the pressure didn’t reach the fittings furthest away from the pump once water was flowing.

It was so bad that the pump would rapidly cycle when we turned the galley sink on, even at full. We had an accumulator in the system but it was located by our galley sink while our water pump is in the bow. Today, I moved the accumulator tank to a spot right after the pump outlet (probably where it should have been all along) and that helped a lot. Now, when the pump runs, it runs smoothly and continuously until max pressure is reached, as it did with our old tubing.

Noisy: If you’re not careful to anchor the plastic tubing where necessary, it can be pretty noisy. It rattles with the pump cycling and the hard tubing makes a hard noise on the hard hull and cabinetry.

Conclusion:

We’ve been trying to fix the problems caused by my plumbing change for four years – a little at a time. It’s been annoying. I think it’s cost us one FW pump as well.

Would I do it again?: Maybe. I could have avoided some of the problems by not using it on the inlet side of the pump, installing the accumulator at the pump and stocking up on spare fittings and tubing. It is awfully easy to install and if you don’t use the little lock rings, easy to modify. I does make for a clean installation.  I feel a little foolish for not realizing there would be a problem on the inlet, but live and learn. And I really hate hose clamps!

P.S. When I was doing some research for this post tonight, I noticed the following on West Marine’s website.

California Prop 65 Warning:
These products may contain bisphenol-A (BPA), a chemical known to the state of California to cause harm to the female reproductive system.

Great, something else to worry about (if I had female reproductive organs, that is)! -Rich

Ugly Pictures

June 20, 2016

We try really hard to post pretty, interesting pictures here, but not all the pictures we take fall into that category. Take these for example…

y-valve

This was a “make-sure-I-remember-how-it-goes-back-together” picture. I take a lot of these. (This is the first to make the blog.)

valve-handle

Above is one of my frequent how-does-that-come-apart pictures. I used to use a flashlight and a mirror to look around corners like this one. Now I just stick my phone into the tight place and snap a bunch of pictures (film is very inexpensive for my Android phone!). Here, I was trying to figure out if there was a screw holding the handle on the thru-hull valve. Yes, there was.

(Today was not such a good day. It was a day of changing head hoses and putting in a new Y valve.)

rent-a-dent

I also use my phone or our camera to supplement my age-failing memory, or as just an easy way to write down a phone number. This is Rent A Dent in Opua. We have one of their dents now. Wayne’s a great guy. -Rich

Tiger Bait – Again!

June 19, 2016

Our departure from New Zealand is later than usual this year. We’re in Opua now and here are all the other cruising boats still waiting to leave…

empty-slips

That’s right. No one. Just us. Legacy: Tiger bait yet again. -Rich

Almost Done

June 18, 2016

With our arrival in Opua, we’re almost done with our season in New Zealand. But New Zealand isn’t done with showing us her ample beautificity (I’ve used the same glowing adjectives to describe New Zealand so many times, I feel I need to start making up some new ones).

Here’s the scene as we rounded Cape Brett this morning.

We’ll rest at least a couple of days in Opua, stock up on chocolate at Makana, cram some more food on the boat (other than the chocolate) and top up the fuel supply. Then we play our weather waiting and watching game again. I hope we’re off to the tropics in the next week or two. It’s COLD here!!!

Recent History: We sailed (well, motored actually) from Nelson to Gisborne and now to Opua – 740 nautical miles in total. We did that to try to find better weather to sail to Noumea, New Caledonia. Of that 740 mile beneath the keel, only 295 of it was made good towards New Cal. The rest of it went into ins, outs, and arounds that didn’t get us any closer to our target. That’s kind of disappointing, but we sure had fun in Gisborne and I really wouldn’t have missed our South Island time for anything. -Rich