I have 14ft Twin Vee. The hull is basically identical to a Livingston (12 & 14). You can see the transom profile in the attached image. I've never seen premade chocks for these(?), and even if they exist, they'd probably be $$$. But being that it's a catamaran, I really just need a flat surface to set it on, then strap it down very securely.
I'm installing a davit, so i can put the skiff on my sundeck hardtop occasionally. The skiff will be set down perpendicular to the trawler. The hardtop already has some solar panels on it, and i want to keep them because the skiff will be in the water 95% of the time. So i need to creat some crosswise bunks/chocks that will keep the skiff above the panels. If you view the diagram, my thought is to bolt down pressure treated 4x6's where the orange lines are.
One possible concern with a pressure treated lumber on my hardtop is all the rainwater is plumbed down thru a 1 micron filter into my tanks -- and I drink it (uv filtered). Reading online, apparently today's pressure treated lumber is non-toxic enough for vegetable gardening, but is it drinking water safe?? I see mixed opinions on painting/epoxying treated lumber.
Figured I'd see if anybody has any input, or better ideas before i go ahead?
I'm installing a davit, so i can put the skiff on my sundeck hardtop occasionally. The skiff will be set down perpendicular to the trawler. The hardtop already has some solar panels on it, and i want to keep them because the skiff will be in the water 95% of the time. So i need to creat some crosswise bunks/chocks that will keep the skiff above the panels. If you view the diagram, my thought is to bolt down pressure treated 4x6's where the orange lines are.
One possible concern with a pressure treated lumber on my hardtop is all the rainwater is plumbed down thru a 1 micron filter into my tanks -- and I drink it (uv filtered). Reading online, apparently today's pressure treated lumber is non-toxic enough for vegetable gardening, but is it drinking water safe?? I see mixed opinions on painting/epoxying treated lumber.
Figured I'd see if anybody has any input, or better ideas before i go ahead?