This is probably a relatively easy question for you old salts.
But I'm at home doing some project planning and am trying to estimate roughly where the waterline is relative to landmarks inside the main salon? On a Mark I (1988).
For example - is the waterline roughly at the top salon seats? Or - half way between the seats and sole?
Thanks!
W : Just out of curiosity, why do you need to know the inside height??
Is it about the height of the water intake to the head!?
The sink in our head has a clear drain hose. It is easy to pick off the waterline from that.
Ron,
I'm planning on installing an AC system and need to figure out where I am going to put the water pump.
I have an extra seacock under the galley sink area that is currently not in service which I would like to use. This seacock may have been for a discharge for the ice box or for a seawater foot pump. Either way - its available. The challenge, however, is where to put the pump. Space is tight, it must below the water line and a constant uphill gradient should be maintained.
So... what I need to determine is where the waterline runs in relationship to the galley sink area.
WT,
Here's what I did to figure it out. I had someone hold a tape measure outside of the boat right by the port window on the starboard side by the sink and measure the distance from the water to the bottom of the window (you can eyeball the tape measure from inside) then measure down from that same point inside the boat. Should work.
Mike
I'm also installing AC, forward under vberth. I've given a lot of thought to seacock, strainer, pump placement. My seacock is in, under vberth. Plan is to put the strainer in the starboard vberth locker (not a very usefull space but with good access), a small rise from the seacock, then the pump on the same shelf as the AC, a small fall from the strainer. Is this a problem? My instructions didn't say about rise and fall, just below water line.
I was cautioned not to use a flush thru hull due to water flow back siphoning and unpriming the pump.
Jim
closing the seacock while underway is my solution for holding the prime. Unless you are running a generator can't use the AC anyway.
Jim
I planning on installing a Dometic Vector Turbo 16000k, so those are instructions I have been looking at. They have a nice diagram of how they recommend the strainer, pump, and AC unit be aligned. See page 13 at:
http://www.dometic.com/FileOrganizer/1-international/Operation%20&%20Installation%20Manuals/Marine%20Air%20Air%20Conditioning/L-2484-Dometic-Turbo-Air-Conditioning.pdf
BTW - I going with this unit primarily since its supposed quieter and have reduced vibration compared to previous units.
W,
Did you end up installing the Vector Turbo 16K? I am considering the same unit for my 36 and I am curious to read a review of a new install. Are you happy with it? Was it worth the extra $$$$? Hoiw is the sound or lack there of?
There are a couple from Dometic that I am considering mainly because the new controls will fit perfectly over my existing controls and I do not want to build additional trim for a new set of controls...
The Vector is twice the price as the the Dometic EnviroComfort Air Conditioning Retrofit Kit - 16K which is basically what I have now only new.
http://www.dometic.com/enus/Americas...ctdataid=98459
Either one should be more efficient (18% on the cool side according to the specs and the plate on my 12 year old MarineAir unit.
Thanks in advance.