rgano
Guru
- Joined
- Oct 8, 2007
- Messages
- 5,200
- Location
- Panama City area
- Vessel Name
- FROLIC
- Vessel Make
- Mainship 30 Pilot II since 2015. GB-42 1986-2015. Former Unlimited Tonnage Master
Validated by my own clamp-on ammeter.
Anyone here with first hand experience with the Coleman SeaMach 13.5 specifically? I'm kind of noise sensitive and nervous about how/if it'll let me sleep...
At this juncture I'm leaning rooftop despite the drawbacks. Last night I poured through this epic thread and thought I'd heard it all and then some...
https://www.trawlerforum.com/forums/s3/marine-c-please-educate-me-45594.html
...but by the end I'm still having a hard time making a firm decision.
FWIW this will be going on a new build, and the builder (Eastern doing a Rosborough 246) seems to lean rooftop as well for that model anyways, and in one of their promotional videos actually feature the aforementioned Coleman. I'm hoping that on trips where the AC may be needed, I'll be able to start and run it with a Honda 2200 with Micro-air easystart. The generator placed in an "appropriate" location - thinking of a fabricated platform with some noise mitigation starboard side at the transom or even on the bracket depending on conditions and platform design.
This boat will live on a trailer and in a garage, except of course when out enjoying the water out of central Florida. Initially St Johns river, eastern ICW and coastal GOM, with hopes of graduating to longer trips U-looping Florida, maybe the Bahamas and eventually the Great Loop.
Thanks again for the feedback, insight and expertise offered up
Mermaid makes a marine 9000 BTU unit that they say will operate on a Honda 2000/2200.
Sorry I wasn't clear- was wondering about a 8-9k rooftop, not reverse cycle.Mermaid makes a marine 9000 BTU unit that they say will operate on a Honda 2000/2200.
I have found that since cold air sinks and warm rises a roof top AC will suck off the warm air and the cold will naturally sink to the lowest point , circulating the ar.
Insulation counts when cooling although the Delta T (diff in temp) between outside and inside may be 30 deg cooling and 70 to 100 deg when heating..
When insolation (sunshine) stops heating the hull cooling is very much easier.
Simi, we've had this conversation in the past. Same latitude does NOT mean same weather. Absolutely no way would you be anywhere close to comfortable on your boat in Florida. Or, maybe you would but very few folks would; hence, the need and desire for air conditioning.You could always put the effort into buying a boat that simply does not need A/C
We live sub tropical and cruise tropical
Same Lattitude as Florida
In 5+ year of full time cruising there has been maybe 3 days we thought A/C would be nice.
Cold shower or a swim sorted that.
Large overhangs, plenty of ventilation, tinted glass
Simi, we've had this conversation in the past. Same latitude does NOT mean same weather. Absolutely no way would you be anywhere close to comfortable on your boat in Florida. Or, maybe you would but very few folks would; hence, the need and desire for air conditioning.
And thats prolly a 95/5 split. I tell my northern friends that SFL winters r whete u need to roll the car windows up between stoplights, then back down when waiting.