Monday, November 23, 2009

Moisture

Until my departure from Port Townsend I had been under the impression that all of Pachuca's moisture problems were due to leaks. After arriving in SF we discovered that a lot of the well packed and protected clothes were moist. Then last week Brenda detected a lot of moisture in the upper shelves in the head. I investigated, worried that there was a leak from the recent rain, but could not find one leak source - the entire ceiling area of the head was dripping with water. We emptied the shelves and dried the head with a towel and electric fan heater. The next morning the head ceiling was dripping again, even though there had been no rain. The top deck was saturated from heavy dew. I dried out the area and following morning it was dry - but so was the top deck probably because there was a wind blowing.

The point of this is that I am resigned to living in a damp boat during my run around the Horn. I'll take measures such as wearing wool clothing and storing clothes in seal bags, but basically I expect a damp boat. Until recently I had thought that all of those heaters fitted to boats in the NW were to provide human comfort, but now I realized that they are also for moisture control. I am not prepared to install a heater on Pachuca because this problem does not seem to be as serious in Western Australia, where heaters on boats are rare.

3 comments:

  1. I take it you are still almost a WA sailor Bob! Hey! Did you get ice-breaker tops from NZ or any shops that sell them. They are awesome...fantastic not just for cold weather but also hot. I live in them to survive!

    ReplyDelete
  2. I take it you are still almost a WA sailor Bob! Hey! Did you get ice-breaker tops from NZ or any shops that sell them. They are awesome...fantastic not just for cold weather but also hot. I live in them to survive!

    ReplyDelete
  3. Nice article you got here. I'd like to read more concerning this theme.
    By the way check the design I've made myself A level escorts

    ReplyDelete