We mentioned before that the lure of an eBike finally got to us and we tested a couple of possible folding bikes to replace our old "pedal only" jobs. Based on the folded size and weight, the Brompton won so here is the crew with her new trusty steed:
They park rather neatly:
and the piece de resistance, folded up ready for the lazarette:
As the weather dried up, we have been using them quite a lot. Impressed so far. There are three levels of assistance you can have from the motor and so far we have only used level 1 - that is plenty, We want to get some exercise too. The battery range is quoted as between 20 to 40 miles depending upon how much help you ask for. We reckon that 40 is easily achievable locally unless we tackle some of the serious hills.
The weirdest experience was getting an email advising of a recall on the bikes for a firmware upgrade! The captain was well used to factory recalls and software updates from his working life with car manufacturers but one for a bike was novel.
Massive excitement time - we needed a trip out of the marina with the boat to visit the pump out station on the barrage again. Somehow it feels like an ocean voyage after days of lockdown. We picked a nice calm Sunday, fired up the big Lugger main engine, called the marina for a lock out and then called Cardiff "Barrage Control" as a courtesy to let them know we would be off to the pump out which is all of 50 metres from the marina lock by the way. See our AIS track:
What other news? Well, Matthew, the owner of the yacht in Neyland that has starred in here before, told us that we were featured in Wales on-line, a well know local news source. Worrying really, we were not sure what we had done to upset the locals bar be English and here. As the article was posted before our trip to the pump out, we knew it could not be from the officious harbour guy.
Luckily we just happened to be in some pictures that were trying to sell a nearby house:
Apparently the house has, to quote the estate agents, "stunning views". Not sure the Nordhavn is that pretty. Still, estate agents do big things up a bit....
Maintenance news:
The wing engine has, for some strange reason, a Racor filter that uses a canister not one of the nice turbine units as fitted to the genset and main engine. The captain had meant to change it for a turbine unit (way easier to charge the filter, common spares with the genset) for ages but never found anew turbine filter at a sensible price. Then, late kast year, ASAP supplies had a deal on them. Deal still meant expensive but not eye wateringly so. Hence the captain bought one and it sat waiting for the enthusiasm to fit it. Naturally, the supply hose from the wing engine fuel tank was not going to be long enough but the new filter could be mounted to use the existing outlet hose and earthing straps in a way that sill allowed it to be gravity filled when a filter change was needed.
Here is the original setup:
As a turbine unit is physically larger, the cooling water hoses that run up to the vented loop would also be in the way and so we needed to have a bracket fabricated to suspend them from the ceiling of the engine room, rather than being attached to the wall. Getting a new inlet hose made up was easy enough courtesy of M&B hydraulics and their scruffy little shack in Cardiff. Fitting it was OK, just meant a bit of a back breaker as everything had to be done leaning over the wing engine. Now, we are just waiting for the new stainless bracket to hold the raw water pipes to finish off the job. Will add a "now" picture once it is all completed.
The old filter assembly is going to a good home - John and Irene who has featured here before have bought a yacht and a backup filter would be handy for their main engine.
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Thanks for your ideas / cheek / corrections / whatever! They should hit the blog shortly after the system checks them to make sure they will not put us or you in jail.....