Stay away from the Catalina's!

Joel Aronson


On Sep 12, 2012, at 8:39 PM, "[email protected]" <[email protected]>
wrote:

Yea, I think she is more pissed off than anything.  "we wasted the whole
summer and it still needs work!"  I told I didn't mind working on the boat
but, she does!  LOL

Okay.
I got the wire and chain back on the sprocket with not too much effort and
the things moved nicely, as they are supposed to.  Took most of my time
getting the 4th compass bolt out...I'll be replacing them.
I didn't like the looks of it all the chain wasn't bad but, dry and it
looked old.  I got it off pretty easily and I'll get a new chain and wire
assembly.
The stops...not great...they were another hack job.  I'll be beefing them
up this fall after she gets hauled.  I'll post some pics in the morning.
I'm not too sure how great they came out.
I did take a swim and all looks fine down there.  One of my zincs has come
loose.  I'm betting that is the cause of the vibration.  I'll have to dive
again with an allen wrench and either tighten it up or remove it (I have
two on there.   One in front and one behind the strut).
Hopefully I can get all my parts tomorrow and install on friday and I'll be
able to sail this weekend.  it supposed to be pretty calm.  8 to 10 knots
and 1ft seas.

The newport boat show is this weekend as well.  we'll probably be hitting
that too.
Danny



---------- Original Message ----------
From: Martin DeYoung <[email protected]>
To: "[email protected]" <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: Stus-List Edson chain and wire failure + wife issues
Date: Wed, 12 Sep 2012 18:21:11 +0000

Another spooking the wife at sea story:



Delivering a C&C 39 back from Hawaii in 1979, my wife’s first Pacific
crossing, we experienced:



Refrigeration failure and loss of food (ended up rationing food for 2 weeks)

Galley fire (2 dry chemical ext. to put it out)

A4 engine failure (middle of taking a short cut through the NE Pac. High
i.e. very light wind)

Water shortage (had 24 days of water took 29 to land in Seattle)



We did have some magical days and nights of gentle sailing while working
our way out of the NE Pacific high.  All on board survived the trial and
tribulations but comfort was sacrificed



My best sales job to date was convincing her to make another trip (Honolulu
to San Francisco) in 1981.



How to regain her confidence in an older C&C for anything more than a light
air day trip? Hell’if I know.  Failed that test myself.  I’m wired for
adventure sailing, local or long distance.  She’s wired for comfort and
social sailing/boating.



Best ideas I have come up with in over 30 years of working on the problem
is to fly her to the destination while me and my salty friends sail the
boat and experience all the good and less good of voyaging under sail.



Martin

Calypso

1971 C&C 43, hull #1

Seattle
------------------------------

*From:* [email protected] [mailto:[email protected]]
*On Behalf Of *Della Barba, Joe
*Sent:* Wednesday, September 12, 2012 5:52 AM
*To:* [email protected]
*Subject:* Re: Stus-List Edson chain and wire pedestal failure



The stops on my boat work well and prevent exactly the kind of thing that
happened to you.

As for your wife……………………..not sure I have a fix for that that doesn’t
involve a lot of money.

If it makes you feel any better, my wife has over the years put up with  -
sometimes with good humor and sometimes not –

A failed fuel pump that I fixed with an outboard squeeze bulb. She had to
squeeze the whole way home or steer while I squeezed. SQUEEZE HARDER DON’T
LET IT GO SOFT was yelled frequently to encourage maintenance of fuel
pressure J

An engine that died on the last day of our cruise about 10 yards from the
mooring. This then entailed putting the engine in the dinghy, dragging it
up on the dock, and using a tree to hoist it into her car. Everything was
going great until the A4- lacking a front oil seal – dumped a quart of oil
in her car. This same cruise involved several days with a heat index around
108-110 and 100% humidity at night. We tried watching a movie at night in
the cockpit for more air and 1,000 moths landed on the TV.  And then the
engine was in the shop and my basement for 2 months getting fixed.

A fuel fill hose that popped a leak and dumped several gallons of gas into
the bilge.

A bilge pump that for some reason – after a decade of good service –
decided to siphon INTO the boat and caused my wife to step into almost
knee-deep water around 0200 when she got up to use the head.

More engine malfunctions than I can count until I finally gave the damn
thing away and got another one. My wife actually accused me of LIKING these
issues because one day I was dancing around yelling “I AM A GOD OF ENGINES”
after a successful MacGyver fix of some ignition malfunction.



Even brand new boats have all kinds of issues. Anyone who buys a used boat
or airplane has a year or two of getting everything fixed and even then it
is always an adventure. A lot of cash will get you a new boat, but it isn’t
easy to fix the expectation that old boats (and airplanes and antique cars
and 1960s British motorcycles) will run like a Honda Civic.



Cruising- (cruzing) Verb. The act of doing boat repairs in exotic locations



*Joe Della Barba*

Coquina

C&C 35 MK I

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