Can I have permission to use that quote!!!!
It's all yours ...
Bruce
Can I have permission to use that quote!!!!
In the 90-100 degree weather, that we have in Louisiana, how or do you try to keep your boat cool while in the marina when no one is aboard. I had the a/c on last summer for 4 months and cooked a unit. I have fans that I leave on but it just moves hot air.
Why do you think you need to bother..? Just do something like Insequent suggested in post 13. I have a slightly smaller solar vent in the for'd cabin hatch, and just leave one small screened bathroom window open, and ok, the boat is a bit warm when you first go in on a summer day, but quickly improved by opening the pilot and cockpit doors and a couple of windows. Our climate in summer is just as hot as yours, and like Brian says, seems crazy leaving power hungry stuff on, to wear out and chew up electricity, when it is serving little purpose. You US guys have just got too soft & too used to mod cons I reckon...
It's all yours ...
Bruce
On my little boat I don't run the air conditioner unless I'm aboard. I do have a compact dehumidifier that runs 24/7. It keeps the humidity in the low sixties. No mildew.
....standard aviation term for life limited parts..
Water temperature in Rockport TX in August-89 degrees. Galveston Bay 87 degrees. Cannon Bay, FL 90 in June (it's on the gulf coast). Miami peaks at 86.
yeah, I see what you mean. So there is no relief by having the water cooling the hull.
yeah, I see what you mean. So there is no relief by having the water cooling the hull.
FWIW, I have used dehumidifiers on my last two boats. It runs full time when at our home dock. I always set it on the galley counter and had it drain into the sink. Sailboaters would get all worried that I wasn't closing the galley sink thru hull when leaving the boat, power boaters don't seem to care. I have yet to put the dehumidifier on the new boat. I will do it it likely in the fall when the humidity starts to rise and the temps start to cool. Doing that keeps the boat bone dry even in our winters.
My brother bumped his sailboat aground on an outgoing tide last year right outside the marina. It dried out on the sand so he put out a kedge and walked ashore. When the water started getting close to lifting the boat he went back to it to find it flooded with water coming up through the head sink. Cost him thousands, new iPad, new fridge, etc. etc. If he had left it another 45 minutes or so he may have not be able to bail it out before the water reached the gunnel.
The big difference is the keel. A sail boat, (unless bilge keel) lies on its side. A powerboat tends to sit on its bottom.
Shade all exposed to the sun decks that have overhead in cabin or staterooms. If you can draw tarps down to rails to protect bulkheads all the better. Go to fore or aft hatch and install a strong fan blowing out. Go to the opposite end of the boat and open a hatch, a large hatch or 2 Windows. Close all other Windows, hatches, doors and so forth. Suck air in and pull through the boat and blow it out. You should be ok with the attic fan concept.
I'm in South West Florida very warm 90* +/- canal water plus hard growth in my strainers in four to six weeks if used everyday, (growth looks like tiny mussels).