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Re: Project "Tri Fly"
Posted: Fri Feb 26, 2016 1:43 pm
by Misty
That was a heavy lifting day for sure. TEENAGERS will be out of school before you know it. They are great at carrying plywood and handing u *** thats too far away

Re: Project "Tri Fly"
Posted: Fri Feb 26, 2016 1:48 pm
by Misty
The shower miraculously became a shower. Lets call it a "spray booth" with the low flow showerhead I installed. I really should post pics but winfone plus discussion board equals pain in the rear.Get some teenagers to help you for the promise of a boat ride! They can hand you a tool and fetch beverages just fine!
Re: Project "Tri Fly"
Posted: Wed Apr 27, 2016 1:02 pm
by Barrie
Hi folks, time for a project update.
I now have 1 engine in and running with everything hooked up, with the exception of the alternator and water pump. Sounds great!
I have most of the AC wiring in, including stove, ac, water heater, microwave, refrigerator, and additional outlets installed in the heads, galley and salon.
I have the galley cabinets in place and stained, although the colour clashes with my flooring, so I’m going to darken the stain and use a light coloured granite on the counter tops.
I made a booth seat for the salon dining area with lots of storage under and behind. Just needs covering.
I installed fuel lines for the generator and engines, even the engine that's not there yet

Sanded down the swim platform

cleaned fuel tank

I didn't really do much to the forward head or V berth, so far just a clean up and new floor in the head. Also covered the toilet stand with fibreglass.

Aft bunks that will have a platform across the 2 beds for a queen matress

I believe at this point I have all the bulkheads in and tabbed and all the “big” construction done.
In the next few weeks I hope to do the aft head (vanity, tub/shower), flooring, carpet (stairs) wall coverings and hardware in the galley.
I was hoping to use the boat this year, but a rental I have just became unexpectantly vacant and I have some work to do before I can get tenants back in it. grrrreat!
Thanks for all the comments and suggestions to date, they have been encouraging and helpful. I hope to meet some of the Trojan family, even if I have to drive to do it!
Re: Project "Tri Fly"
Posted: Thu Apr 28, 2016 12:52 pm
by Christian
Hi Barrie,
Wow! Fantastic progress. If I had known that with a "little" elbow grease she would look this good, I would have bought her

...
That fuel tank sure looks clean. How did you manage that?
Christian
Re: Project "Tri Fly"
Posted: Thu Apr 28, 2016 1:57 pm
by El L Sea
Looking great!
I just put my cabinet pulls on, and I felt at one point that would never happen.
Long roads often lead to happy places!
Re: Project "Tri Fly"
Posted: Thu Apr 28, 2016 3:31 pm
by Barrie
Christian wrote:Hi Barrie,
Wow! Fantastic progress. If I had known that with a "little" elbow grease she would look this good, I would have bought her

...
That fuel tank sure looks clean. How did you manage that?
Christian
HaHa! OK Christian
for the fuel tank I did all the cleaning trough the fill tube hole.
The hardest part was getting the fill pipe off the tank, it was stuck good.
I sprayed Gunk engine degreaser in and then power washed it, one down 2 to go.
The big tank on the starboard side was shot so I cut it up and removed it

Re: Project "Tri Fly"
Posted: Thu Apr 28, 2016 3:33 pm
by Barrie
El L Sea wrote:Looking great!
I just put my cabinet pulls on, and I felt at one point that would never happen.
Long roads often lead to happy places!
I saw you galley remodel on the other post, and it looks awesome. I would be very happy if my project looked even close to that!
Re: Project "Tri Fly"
Posted: Thu Apr 28, 2016 5:35 pm
by mike0469
Your project is awesome and very educational! Thanks for documenting everything so well. How did you pressure wash the inside of the tank through the small filler tube hole. Did you just drop in a pressure hose and tip and let it randomly spray the inside? I need to do the same thing to my tanks.
Re: Project "Tri Fly"
Posted: Thu Apr 28, 2016 7:19 pm
by P-Dogg
You'll be adding a hose clamp to support that vertical copper tubing, right? Which looks awesome by the way. I love good tubing craftsmanship. Just seems like a long moment arm on that filter fitting. Keep up the good work, and the good documentation.
Re: Project "Tri Fly"
Posted: Fri Apr 29, 2016 9:08 am
by Barrie
mike0469 wrote:Your project is awesome and very educational! Thanks for documenting everything so well. How did you pressure wash the inside of the tank through the small filler tube hole. Did you just drop in a pressure hose and tip and let it randomly spray the inside? I need to do the same thing to my tanks.
Hi Mike0469, my power washer has a metal wand and I was able to bend it 90 degrees. I took a while, spray inspect, spray inspect...repeat!
Re: Project "Tri Fly"
Posted: Fri Apr 29, 2016 9:57 am
by Barrie
P-Dogg wrote:You'll be adding a hose clamp to support that vertical copper tubing, right? Which looks awesome by the way. I love good tubing craftsmanship. Just seems like a long moment arm on that filter fitting. Keep up the good work, and the good documentation.
Thanks Mr. Dogg. I haven't quite figured out the aft locker walls, to seal the locker from the sleeping area. When I do I will be sure to add more clamps.
I also plan to pull everything off the bulkhead and framing and seal it with paint/resin/epoxy
Re: Project "Tri Fly"
Posted: Fri Apr 29, 2016 9:12 pm
by mike0469
Barrie wrote:mike0469 wrote:Your project is awesome and very educational! Thanks for documenting everything so well. How did you pressure wash the inside of the tank through the small filler tube hole. Did you just drop in a pressure hose and tip and let it randomly spray the inside? I need to do the same thing to my tanks.
Hi Mike0469, my power washer has a metal wand and I was able to bend it 90 degrees. I took a while, spray inspect, spray inspect...repeat!
Thanks for the info, Barrie!
Re: Project "Tri Fly"
Posted: Sun May 15, 2016 12:47 pm
by Misty
Barrie I'd relocate the fuel filter for easy access, ditching the frams for a Raycor with drains and removable elements
Re: Project "Tri Fly"
Posted: Mon May 16, 2016 12:34 pm
by Barrie
Thanks Misty, I just searched the Racor marine filters at West marine and it looks like the would fit easily where the frames are. They do look like the way to go.
I'm thinking the fuel filters would be "easy" to access in the aft locker, of course easy being a relative term

Re: Project "Tri Fly"
Posted: Mon May 16, 2016 12:38 pm
by Misty
Hey Barrie,
Thats good. I always do the comical rolling seas experiment. Imagine your engine conks and the berth is covered in Fritos suntan oil and water toys. Get through that and imagine a 2' chop to drain the filter and get on your way! If you can do all that you are good.