Interesting boats

The friendliest place on the web for anyone who enjoys boating.
If you have answers, please help by responding to the unanswered posts.
Pretty Bill Garden 24' camp tender

https://www.facebook.com/marketplace/item/299998815207477/

What a [STRIKE]pretty[/STRIKE] handsome boat!

Bill Garden designed, Cyril Thames Built = BC wood boat royalty. This 24 foot camp tender belongs to a local Navy League. It has been a great asset to the cadets and is ready for its next adventure. Donated to the League a few years ago, boathouse kept most of its life. Is in good shape just needs a little TLC in the way of paint and some bright work touch up. Powered by a heat exchanged 350 CID / 5.7 Lt, 270HP Crusader (recently replaced exhaust rises and mixers) with a Borg Warner Velvet drive. Has (2) x 15-Gal fuel tanks, (2) x start batteries and hydraulic steering. Come with Standard Horizon 155-C GPS and I-Com IC-M302 VHF. Hull is a double skin with membrane in between.
 

Attachments

  • 211199022_10165381566960511_1554779080331320076_n.jpg
    211199022_10165381566960511_1554779080331320076_n.jpg
    101.6 KB · Views: 45
  • 207762111_10165381567055511_77482587129982358_n.jpg
    207762111_10165381567055511_77482587129982358_n.jpg
    117.2 KB · Views: 49
Last edited:
https://www.facebook.com/marketplace/item/299998815207477/

What a [STRIKE]pretty[/STRIKE] handsome boat!

Bill Garden designed, Cyril Thames Built = BC wood boat royalty. This 24 foot camp tender belongs to a local Navy League. It has been a great asset to the cadets and is ready for its next adventure. Donated to the League a few years ago, boathouse kept most of its life. Is in good shape just needs a little TLC in the way of paint and some bright work touch up. Powered by a heat exchanged 350 CID / 5.7 Lt, 270HP Crusader (recently replaced exhaust rises and mixers) with a Borg Warner Velvet drive. Has (2) x 15-Gal fuel tanks, (2) x start batteries and hydraulic steering. Come with Standard Horizon 155-C GPS and I-Com IC-M302 VHF. Hull is a double skin with membrane in between.

if this was any nearer to home I'd buy it right away.
 
https://www.facebook.com/marketplace/item/299998815207477/

What a [STRIKE]pretty[/STRIKE] handsome boat!

Bill Garden designed, Cyril Thames Built = BC wood boat royalty. This 24 foot camp tender belongs to a local Navy League. It has been a great asset to the cadets and is ready for its next adventure. Donated to the League a few years ago, boathouse kept most of its life. Is in good shape just needs a little TLC in the way of paint and some bright work touch up. Powered by a heat exchanged 350 CID / 5.7 Lt, 270HP Crusader (recently replaced exhaust rises and mixers) with a Borg Warner Velvet drive. Has (2) x 15-Gal fuel tanks, (2) x start batteries and hydraulic steering. Come with Standard Horizon 155-C GPS and I-Com IC-M302 VHF. Hull is a double skin with membrane in between.

Great looking day boat.
 
My knee jerk reaction was to make fun of it by saying it looks like this:
T3tQaCOrr93k0qbDA-UfYD4CIH1ZGfUEhdII3-DNk143DqoIX1ez6f9s-eCeha3ymm_FvleYG-Z4sBThqXnz218FWyVNHagggmit0QYodZUj29zWDMg




But it actually looks like a much nicer and more comfy place to live than my boat... :ermm:
I have seen similar boat and they are impressive and more comfy than many brick and mortar homes. For sure these are not intended for ocean crossing but to cruise on lakes and rivers.

L
 
Anyone know which, what cool boat this is? Look like it has it all!

Wanderbird is a Park Isle Marine build. I lusted after them for years in the back of Pacific Yachting.

https://www.parkislemarine.com/royal-passagemaker

Thanks! Found a couple of cool links for it, the video is a bit jerky for some reason tho..

https://youtu.be/jXBTdKYt93U

https://www.yachtworld.co.uk/research/wanderbird-trawler-a-boat-for-the-seven-seas/

Seems this trawler yacht had a tragic beginning as well.

https://www.nytimes.com/2005/12/07/...-66-financier-and-pilot-is-presumed-dead.html

I finally remembered where I had first seen Wanderbird in photos. Fairhaven Yachts page: https://www.fairhavenyachtsales.com/index.html
 
Last edited:
Maybe another $15-20K and presto, an almost perfect boat.
I was thinking a little bimini over the cockpit area for times of adverse weather and convert the forward cabin to a berth. Start with a $5K budget, end up spending $15K, and it makes a nice little islander. :blush:
 
I was thinking a little bimini over the cockpit area for times of adverse weather and convert the forward cabin to a berth. Start with a $5K budget, end up spending $15K, and it makes a nice little islander. :blush:

No A/C no heat. Hmmmm
 
It's only the beginning and where better than CA.
 

Sandia National Labs:

The hidden culprit killing lithium-metal batteries from the inside


ALBUQUERQUE, N.M. — For decades, scientists have tried to make reliable lithium-metal batteries. These high-performance storage cells hold 50% more energy than their prolific, lithium-ion cousins, but higher failure rates and safety problems like fires and explosions have crippled commercialization efforts. Researchers have hypothesized why the devices fail, but direct evidence has been sparse.

Sandia National Laboratories scientists Katie Harrison, left, and Katie Jungjohann have pioneered a new way to look inside batteries to learn how and why they fail.

Now, the first nanoscale images ever taken inside intact, lithium-metal coin batteries (also called button cells or watch batteries) challenge prevailing theories and could help make future high-performance batteries, such as for electric vehicles, safer, more powerful and longer lasting.

“We’re learning that we should be using separator materials tuned for lithium metal,” said battery scientist Katie Harrison, who leads Sandia National Laboratories’ team for improving the performance of lithium-metal batteries.
Sandia scientists, in collaboration with Thermo Fisher Scientific Inc., the University of Oregon and Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, published the images recently in ACS Energy Letters. The research was funded by Sandia’s Laboratory Directed Research and Development program and the Department of Energy.

Internal byproduct builds up, kills batteries

The team repeatedly charged and discharged lithium coin cells with the same high-intensity electric current that electric vehicles need to charge. Some cells went through a few cycles, while others went through more than a hundred cycles. Then, the cells were shipped to Thermo Fisher Scientific in Hillsboro, Oregon, for analysis.

In this new, false-color image of a lithium-metal test battery produced by Sandia National Laboratories, high-rate charging and recharging red lithium metal greatly distorts the green separator, creating tan reaction byproducts, to the surprise of scientists.

When the team reviewed images of the batteries’ insides, they expected to find needle-shaped deposits of lithium spanning the battery. Most battery researchers think that a lithium spike forms after repetitive cycling and that it punches through a plastic separator between the anode and the cathode, forming a bridge that causes a short. But lithium is a soft metal, so scientists have not understood how it could get through the separator.

Harrison’s team found a surprising second culprit: a hard buildup formed as a byproduct of the battery’s internal chemical reactions. Every time the battery recharged, the byproduct, called solid electrolyte interphase, grew. Capping the lithium, it tore holes in the separator, creating openings for metal deposits to spread and form a short. Together, the lithium deposits and the byproduct were much more destructive than previously believed, acting less like a needle and more like a snowplow.

“The separator is completely shredded,” Harrison said, adding that this mechanism has only been observed under fast charging rates needed for electric vehicle technologies, but not slower charging rates.

As Sandia scientists think about how to modify separator materials, Harrison says that further research also will be needed to reduce the formation of byproducts.

Scientists pair lasers with cryogenics to take ‘cool’ images
Determining cause-of-death for a coin battery is surprisingly difficult. The trouble comes from its stainless-steel casing. The metal shell limits what diagnostics, like X-rays, can see from the outside, while removing parts of the cell for analysis rips apart the battery’s layers and distorts whatever evidence might be inside.

“We have different tools that can study different components of a battery, but really we haven’t had a tool that can resolve everything in one image,” said Katie Jungjohann, a Sandia nanoscale imaging scientist at the Center for Integrated Technologies. The center is a user facility jointly operated by Sandia and Los Alamos national laboratories.

She and her collaborators used a microscope that has a laser to mill through a battery’s outer casing. They paired it with a sample holder that keeps the cell’s liquid electrolyte frozen at temperatures between minus 148 and minus 184 degrees Fahrenheit (minus 100 and minus 120 degrees Celsius, respectively). The laser creates an opening just large enough for a narrow electron beam to enter and bounce back onto a detector, delivering a high-resolution image of the battery’s internal cross section with enough detail to distinguish the different materials.

The original demonstration instrument, which was the only such tool in the United States at the time, was built and still resides at a Thermo Fisher Scientific laboratory in Oregon. An updated duplicate now resides at Sandia. The tool will be used broadly across Sandia to help solve many materials and failure-analysis problems.

“This is what battery researchers have always wanted to see,” Jungjohann said.
 
Hmmmm, no engine hours, no berths. Not much of a galley. What's in the aft cabin? Yup, clean slate.

Price, not too bad.
Maybe another $15-20K and presto, an almost perfect boat.


And according to the placard, capacity, including crew is 43 people! Any clue where you would put them all?:popcorn:
 
Nice boat, but my trips are far from "expeditions".
 

Latest posts

Back
Top Bottom