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marinheiro

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Posts posted by marinheiro

  1. I have not used it but I asume that most of the Fiji weather map info is provided in the IAC Fleet code

    reports, available from Saildocs or Yotreps. I see OpenCPN has a plug in to translate this data. Useful info when at sea.

  2. Interesting situation over the next 7 days to reach NZ.

    If you were in Tonga I think that is where you should be staying with the low to the east of NZ and the SWly's coming off the advancing high.

    From New Cal a strategy could be keep to the west and advance down the back of the high as it progresses across the Tasman & NZ. Might be some motoring required

    Weather sites I check

    Predictwind

    Metservice

    MetVUW

    Marine weather

    BOM (Australia)

    any others of note people have used?

  3. The weather forecasts these days give a good indication of what you are likely to encounter heading  north from NZ, perhaps a little less so for the return trip, but overall allow an informed decision.

    Max" went to Fiji early July and came back mid August (not the preferred times) and had the odd bumpy day on both trips but no problems.

    "Katariana" has just arrived from New Cal via Norfolk Is - they motored almost the whole way from Norfolk to Auckland

    Yet in other years boats have experienced dreadful conditions voyaging in these same times.

  4. Wheels, you are right about Green Grenade perhaps being unfair (it certainly applied to alot of the 2003T engines), but I did say "perception"

    The D2 series Volvos are all supplied by the Perkins/Shibaura JV, Perkins being owned by Caterpillar.

    That Green paint sure must be expensive..

  5. unfortunately not so (from UK gov website):

     

    Goods you can’t get a refund for

     

    You can’t get a VAT refund for:

     

    mail order goods, including internet sales

    goods you’ve already used in the EU, such as perfume

    service charges, eg hotel bills

    new or used cars

    goods worth more than £600 exported for business purposes

    goods to be exported as freight

    goods that need an export licence (except antiques)

    unmounted gemstones

    gold over 125g, 2.75 troy ounces or 10 tolas

    a boat you plan to sail to a destination outside the EU

  6. Hi Romany, you will have a bolted on lead keel, highly unlikely it is glassed, no point.

    Some epoxy bog should fix the keel problem, depending on how hard you hit it may be worth checking the keel floors to make sure there was no movement.

  7. sorry to be the downer, but the ATO have SD's scheme covered, with very prescriptive regulations - GST refund is for "new" boats only - no more than 12 mths old and rules about usage, mods, on-selling etc.

    One other "surprise", a friend recently bought a power cat in QLD to be delivered to NZ, and he could not find a surveyor there. Apparently they do not want to know pleasure boats because there is no money in them but large potential liabilities.

    Cabrinha - are you sure you cannot find want you want in NZ? Australian market is way overpriced and you would take both the FOREX & GST hit. Those costs could go a long way towards refitting a local yacht.

  8. If the yacht was built in Australia I do not believe duty is applicable (CER agreement).

    You will not get an Australian GST refund exporting a used ítem, be it car, motorbike boat etc, from the ATO. They have no interest in taxes you might have to pay elsewhere

  9. Hi Matt,

    I currently have a Standard Horizon CPF300i Plotter/Sounder.

    It has NMEA 0183 inputs (3) and outputs (4) and can also take a video feed, which I guess could be used as a second screen from a Laptop

  10. What do people think about the pro's and con's of integrating AIS (and other electronics for that matter) as against stand alone

    eg from Vesper's range

    standalone: Watchmate 850 and Vision

    integrated: XB-8000

    The obvious pro for integration is potentially being able to display all info (chart/radar/AIS)on a single screen, the con being if that screen goes down you have nothing.

    Other thoughts??

  11. just a comment on terminology, the AIS units used in maritime are "Tranceivers". They are transmitting continuously.

    A Transponder, as used in aviation, only transmits in response to an incoming signal. Even the Vesper site is incorrect in this respect

    Some AIS units can also transmit additional data when "queried", but this is a secondary function.

    Re radar reflectors, most are a waste of time and weight aloft, something like this is better option (in addition to an AIS transceiver)

    http://www.sea-me.co.uk/

  12. For me the most important thing is not to go overboard in the first place. In an offshore shorthanded situation the chances of a. being found and b. being recovered are not good. Remember super experienced guys like Rob James and Eric Tabarly, even when crew found them they could not get them onto the boat.

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