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MartinRF

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Everything posted by MartinRF

  1. Over here daylight saving just started and the nearby airport reported -8 C tonight. But, yes, sunny and drifty. /Martin (need to wait a little before I can apply that coat of epoxy to my decks...)
  2. MartinRF

    UV Damage

    Having watched this happen to my clear coated decks my conclusion is that the UV filter is not good enough to stop the epoxy below from breaking down. It only slows it down and eventually the bond between epoxy and clear coat gives up. The clear coat flakes off. Wait long enough and the wood below the epoxy laminate is affected enough for that bond to break. This never happens where I have paint on top of the epoxy. Wood-epoxy cat. 35 years in Sweden so less UV than you have. https://www.reflectometrist.eu/ I am re-doing the clear coat on the decks this spring. I am scraping off the
  3. 39 years ago I took this photo between two winter storms. /Martin
  4. Here is a simple alternative. http://www.katiekat.net/Cruise/Cruise2003EPhotos/JibClew3.jpg /Martin
  5. I have browsed that report a little and it looks like an interesting read. I wonder if there is something like that for Scandinavia... More on geology: Some years ago I stumbled on this lecture: /Martin
  6. Link to Peter Balance's report: https://www.geotrips.org.nz/downloads/Ballance_NZ_Geology-V2.pdf /Martin
  7. Live music? I mean, Händel's Water Music... Many moons ago (late 1970s) I sailed some on a school ship, this one: On one occasion we ha teenage girls as crew/pupils. Some of them knew each other already. They sang in the same choir... /Martin
  8. Don't use Facebook! Problem solved. /Martin
  9. Earlier this week I learned that even George Orwell sported a toothbrush mustache for a while. I don't know who those guys are, apart from my grandfather that is. /Martin
  10. Bought my jacket in 2012 so more than 6 years old but it has not seen heavy use. But the real reason for posting again is to share this photo of my maternal grandfather trying out his new boat with some friends. I don't have an exact date, sometime in the second half of the 1930s I think. Not quite dressed like we are used to now /Martin
  11. When you want a deluge they are far and few between... So I did some preliminary testing in my shower cabin: Better but no cigar. The shoulder part still leaks some so I opted for some reinforcement using a spray-on product. Before that I also applied some heat by means of ironing at lowest power. Both seemed to help. Tonight we got some rain, not heavy though, and I took a longish walk. OK, much better. It will keep me dry in non-demanding conditions, at least for a while. Inspecting the inside at home I see water is still coming through but much less. So Nikwax helps but it do
  12. Right, I have pondered this smock thing for a while. Probably a better choice for me and my boat and my kind of sailing than a jacket. /Martin
  13. Last time I heard about his, which was many moons ago, they got custom kits, not what is sold over the counter. /Martin
  14. MartinRF

    What if...?

    Day before midsummer must be June. Fire bans are in force when it is deemed too dry. /Martin
  15. MartinRF

    What if...?

    You think the days in August are long? That is when people here start to lament the shortening of the day. /Martin
  16. No, I am not that old. Those MTBs were retired well before my time. One of these: Also retired. The remaining ones are used for taking paying guests on joy rides in protected waters in summer. There are tons of amateur videos on youtube. /Martin
  17. I am not up-to-date with what they use today but when building my boat my building buddy was involved in a research project looking into the work environment for fishermen. His part was about sea-kindliness and how ship movement wore down the bodies of fishermen. Another group was looking into foul weather gear. They did look into new, high-tech materials but soon dismissed them. The solution (back then) that worked best was the PVC-coated stuff with good design taking care of ventilation. I did my military service in the Swedish navy a couple of years prior to that and the navy foul weat
  18. MartinRF

    What if...?

    My fault, sorry Hint: the Gulf Stream helps a lot. I have a colleague from Tromsö located at N69 plus change. Still ice-free. I don't think Norway has any icebreakers. In the Bay of Botnia and the Gulf of Finland icebreakers is a must have most years. /Martin
  19. MartinRF

    What if...?

    I guess this poll is not for me. At N59 we don't usually go sailing in January /Martin
  20. Banned according to the care label. I have destroyed another jacket by not studying the care label (until afterwards). That time a washed in 40 C (label said 30 C) and tumble dried (label said not). I don't which part of this killed the waterproofing. Right now I am subjecting this jacket to to a mild (35 C) heat treatment. Then I hope for some real rain to test it. /Martin
  21. Done this today. Drip drying as we 'speak'. I had some luck and stumbled on a particularly good deal (for being in Sweden) on a Nikwax wash and impregnating combo. Btw, I sailed mid-week using my Helly-Hansen overall (due to temperature, not wet ride). I had forgotten how nice it is and it is 30+ years old. Velcro strips are not in mint condition but hard to replace without compromising weather proofing. /Martin
  22. Instructions says "Drip-dry or tumble dry on a low setting if the care label allows". Which did you do? Tumble dry is out of the question according to my jacket's care label. /Martin
  23. Had a pair of Line 7 PVC bibs 35+ years ago. Very durable but also very heavy and clumsy. I do have a complete set of PVC, high-vizibility foul weather gear for when I know I will get dirty and don't need mobility/agility. Low cost but for standing up in bad weather rather than sailing my boat. The H-H overall I mentioned keeps me drier and offers more agility than the PVC stuff. Going for bibs + jacket is a convenience thing. /Martin
  24. Where I am now, Stockholm, Sweden, salt is not part of the environment. Apart, that is, from the salt they spread on icy roads. I have other 'breathable' all-weather gear for other types of outdoorsy activities such as my (non-pandemic) daily bicycle commute and have had no such problems until wear is rather obvious. The one disappointment was a bright blue thing from an American brand starting with the letter P. The watertight/breathable coating started flaking after two years. When I was still living on the Swedish west-coast where wind and real waves means spray (salty spray), my
  25. Yesterday's sail ended in a downpour. The good thing is I had rolled up sails and stowed them in my starboard hull before the rain started. The bad thing is I found my foul weather jacked is anything but water tight. Shoulders and arms wet to the skin in minutes. This garment is at the end of its eight season if my notes are correct. Eight seasons of very light use. There are no signs of wear and the cloth looks completely intact yet a few minutes of rain was all it took to get wet. Will washing and re-impregnating bring this thing back to form or is this the new normal for fancy, brand n
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