Kiss my ass Rivets

Ever tried to remove a rivet? It is freaking maddening. I would usually just end up choosing the nuclear option and trash what ever it was I was working on to get the little bastard out.

One of the many ToDo items on my recent mast project was to remove and replace a crapload of rivets on my mast and was not really looking forward it. Until I found an awesome little tool that makes it freaking simple as hell.

This is that tool:

It’s called a Rivet Removal Tool which is a pretty ingenious name when you think about it. It’s a tool, that removes rivets. Seriously, how do they come up with this stuff?

I guess it is kind of expensive (approx. $60), but I’m a sucker for single use tools. Tools that are designed to do one job and do it AWESOME!

Once I started using the thing, I ended up replacing more rivets than originally planned. It basically works like a drill bit, but has an extra part that grabs the rivet head and keeps it from spinning. And that is the part that drives you fuggin crazy if you don’t have this tool.

Now I can save my nukes for other things that I swore I would NEVER take off again and used 5200 on.

Posted in Installations, Palarran, tools | Leave a comment

Backup paper Charts.

Paper charts.

Everyone says they have them, or plan on getting them. I’d be willing to bet that half of those people don’t really have them, and/or never get them. Or, if they actually do have them they are horribly out of date.

I’m solidly in the out of date category myself. But to be honest, computer navigation systems are getting so friggin reliable, robust, AND cheap. Paper charts are becoming more and more backups for your backups.

You could go with a dedicated navigation system like Garmin, or Simrad (Installing this on our boat now), or anyone of the other options available. You could save a bunch of money and go the iPad route and install Navionics. Or do like we did for years and run some version of Navigation software on your laptop, plugged into a handheld GPS. The possibilities are almost endless.

All that being said, stuff on boats get wet. Electrical stuff getting wet, does not equal awesome. So back-up paper charts are still a good idea. One of the major drawbacks to paper charts though is the freakin’ cost. Which probably contributes to why a lot of boaters either don’t have paper charts or “plan” on getting them someday. It sucks paying a few hundred dollars for something you will most likely never use, or are out of date, or you don’t even know how to use properly.

Which brings us to the reason for this post. I was poking around NOAA’s website the other day and found they have an experimental program going on. Check it out here. The booklet format is experimental, not the charts. :)

Quote from the website:

The NOAA BookletChartâ„¢ is an experimental product that you can print at home for free. They are made to help recreational boaters locate themselves on the water.
The Booklet Chart is reduced in scale and divided into pages for convenience, but otherwise contains all the information of the full-scale nautical chart. Bar scales are also reduced in scale, but are accurate when used to measure distances in a BookletChart. Excerpts from the United States Coast Pilot are included. Most chart notes are consolidated on a single page for easy reference. Emergency information for the charted area is printed on the back cover.

Printable charts from NOAA are not a new thing. What is new is the booklet format. Click the region and sub regions you want, download them as .pdfs and print them out at home or work. Or go to something like Fedex.com’s online printing have it printed out and bound for around $30 per booklet. Which is a lot cheaper than than buying all those charts the old school way. And they will be up to date.

The really nice bit, is that in this format, each edge of the map is marked so you know which page to flip to.

Being a bit of map geek. I prefer to plot/navigate on the old school, large charts. But having these booklets on board as a back up is great/cheap alternative to spending tons of cash on charts for regions you are just passing through.

Posted in Maps, tools | Leave a comment

Full disclosure

Today, or was it yesterday? Either way, I setup a Associates Account with Amazon.com and will from time to time be linking items Me or Tawn use on the boat or tools I’ve bought and liked or what the fuck ever.

Anyway, bottom line. Sometimes an item or picture will link directly to amazon. From this I may get a very small, probably not even worth it, percentage from clicks and/or purchases. I don’t really like ads, on the site. But I figure this is an unobtrusive way to try and make a dollar or two from this site.

Oh and it’s me…or Tawn posting these things. There will be no random automatic post from Amazon or bots. Just things we use or have used that come in handy on the boat.

Here are a couple examples.

Something for the ladies:

And one for you fellas:

Oh and one other thing. If you have ad blocker on, the pictures will not show up. So there’s that.

Posted in Random Oddness, tools | Tagged | Leave a comment