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Anyone Using a Force 10 Cabin Heater?
- stxray
- Gold Member
- Posts: 149
- Joined: Thu Nov 12, 2015 8:25 pm
- Home Port: Sea Isle City, NJ
- Location: Southeast Pennsylvania / Sea Isle City, New Jersey
Anyone Using a Force 10 Cabin Heater?
I just picked up a Force 10 diesel-fired, cabin heater at a garage sale. I wasn't really looking for one but it was too cheap to pass up
Now the fun part - Installation
I'm thinking I'll install it against the bulkhead ahead of the closet. I'll probably install a piece of stainless steel on the bulkhead behind it to deflect the heat and protect the wood. It uses a 1" exhaust tube so a small hole on the cabin roof seems necessary.
Anyone using one of these or something similar? Any pictures, installation advice or suggestions would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks,
Ray
Now the fun part - Installation
I'm thinking I'll install it against the bulkhead ahead of the closet. I'll probably install a piece of stainless steel on the bulkhead behind it to deflect the heat and protect the wood. It uses a 1" exhaust tube so a small hole on the cabin roof seems necessary.
Anyone using one of these or something similar? Any pictures, installation advice or suggestions would be greatly appreciated.
Thanks,
Ray
Al Dente
1975 Albin 25 Deluxe, Hull #2350
Volvo Penta MD3B
Dinghy: 7'2" Achilles Inflatable w/ 2 Hp Honda
Residence: Southeast Pennsylvania
Homeport: Sea Isle City, NJ
1975 Albin 25 Deluxe, Hull #2350
Volvo Penta MD3B
Dinghy: 7'2" Achilles Inflatable w/ 2 Hp Honda
Residence: Southeast Pennsylvania
Homeport: Sea Isle City, NJ
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- Gold Member
- Posts: 475
- Joined: Wed Aug 04, 2010 11:21 am
- Home Port: Vero Beach FL
Re: Anyone Using a Force 10 Cabin Heater?
Hi Ray
We had a propane version of this model (I'm assuming this is the one you bought? http://www.go2marine.com/docs/8/3/1/0/83101F-mi.shtml) on our Crealock 37 sailboat. It was very effective although we had to run a hella fan near it to prevent stratification in the cabin. We had stainless backing board on the bulkhead but also ended up cutting a small piece of stainless and sticking it inside the unit to shield the cabin side from the burner's heat. There was a good 12" between the side of the stove and the bulkhead but the radiant heat from the stove's burner still made the cabin side unacceptably hot.
I'm having trouble picturing where you are thinking of installing it, do you mean that half bulkhead to the left of the head door?
If that is the place you're thinking I see several potential problems
It will be very easy to bump into the stove (especially when working in the galley) and it gets VERY HOT
The exhaust tube will have to be shielded so you don't accidentally grab it it while moving around the boat
There may not be enough swing room for the head door to open up.
You may bump into it while working in the galley
You might consider putting it on the main bulkhead as far outboard as possible on the starboard side (but not underneath the side deck.) And a fan to circulate the air thoughout the cabin would be a plus.
If you can find a safe place to install it I'm sure that you're going to love it. We used ours a lot during the spring and fall on the Chesapeake , and on our trips up and down the ICW in the fall
Jay
We had a propane version of this model (I'm assuming this is the one you bought? http://www.go2marine.com/docs/8/3/1/0/83101F-mi.shtml) on our Crealock 37 sailboat. It was very effective although we had to run a hella fan near it to prevent stratification in the cabin. We had stainless backing board on the bulkhead but also ended up cutting a small piece of stainless and sticking it inside the unit to shield the cabin side from the burner's heat. There was a good 12" between the side of the stove and the bulkhead but the radiant heat from the stove's burner still made the cabin side unacceptably hot.
I'm having trouble picturing where you are thinking of installing it, do you mean that half bulkhead to the left of the head door?
If that is the place you're thinking I see several potential problems
It will be very easy to bump into the stove (especially when working in the galley) and it gets VERY HOT
The exhaust tube will have to be shielded so you don't accidentally grab it it while moving around the boat
There may not be enough swing room for the head door to open up.
You may bump into it while working in the galley
You might consider putting it on the main bulkhead as far outboard as possible on the starboard side (but not underneath the side deck.) And a fan to circulate the air thoughout the cabin would be a plus.
If you can find a safe place to install it I'm sure that you're going to love it. We used ours a lot during the spring and fall on the Chesapeake , and on our trips up and down the ICW in the fall
Jay
-
- Gold Member
- Posts: 2285
- Joined: Wed Nov 13, 2013 10:48 am
- Home Port: Hood Canal, WA
Re: Anyone Using a Force 10 Cabin Heater?
These miserable winter days sure make a heater seem like a good idea. Like Jay, I wonder where to stick the thing, especially in the A25. Maybe mount it on the OUTSIDE and duct it in. Ha!
I can't pass up good deals either but I am approaching the accumulation point where I may need to move in the middle of the night and leave it all behind. I have a two-way water heater, maybe mount it next to your Force 10, a stainless exhaust elbow that may not fit under my cover, three engines to mix and match and steal parts from, 4 or 5 starters I lose count and used gaskets from two or three rebuilds ago by POs. Enough, already!
But a warm cabin? Nice!
I can't pass up good deals either but I am approaching the accumulation point where I may need to move in the middle of the night and leave it all behind. I have a two-way water heater, maybe mount it next to your Force 10, a stainless exhaust elbow that may not fit under my cover, three engines to mix and match and steal parts from, 4 or 5 starters I lose count and used gaskets from two or three rebuilds ago by POs. Enough, already!
But a warm cabin? Nice!
-
- Gold Member
- Posts: 475
- Joined: Wed Aug 04, 2010 11:21 am
- Home Port: Vero Beach FL
Re: Anyone Using a Force 10 Cabin Heater?
opps sorry, I was thinking about my FC27 when I was discussing the layout, don't have a clue about the 25 having never been on one.
- stxray
- Gold Member
- Posts: 149
- Joined: Thu Nov 12, 2015 8:25 pm
- Home Port: Sea Isle City, NJ
- Location: Southeast Pennsylvania / Sea Isle City, New Jersey
Re: Anyone Using a Force 10 Cabin Heater?
What if you were to pickup another A25 and fasten the two of them together, catamaran-style? If you were to space them far enough apart, you'd have room for all kinds of stuff. However, finding dock space could be problematic.WillieC wrote:These miserable winter days sure make a heater seem like a good idea. Like Jay, I wonder where to stick the thing, especially in the A25. Maybe mount it on the OUTSIDE and duct it in. Ha!
I can't pass up good deals either but I am approaching the accumulation point where I may need to move in the middle of the night and leave it all behind. I have a two-way water heater, maybe mount it next to your Force 10, a stainless exhaust elbow that may not fit under my cover, three engines to mix and match and steal parts from, 4 or 5 starters I lose count and used gaskets from two or three rebuilds ago by POs. Enough, already!
But a warm cabin? Nice!
Sounds like a great idea to me...or, maybe it's the acetone
Al Dente
1975 Albin 25 Deluxe, Hull #2350
Volvo Penta MD3B
Dinghy: 7'2" Achilles Inflatable w/ 2 Hp Honda
Residence: Southeast Pennsylvania
Homeport: Sea Isle City, NJ
1975 Albin 25 Deluxe, Hull #2350
Volvo Penta MD3B
Dinghy: 7'2" Achilles Inflatable w/ 2 Hp Honda
Residence: Southeast Pennsylvania
Homeport: Sea Isle City, NJ
-
- Gold Member
- Posts: 2285
- Joined: Wed Nov 13, 2013 10:48 am
- Home Port: Hood Canal, WA
Re: Anyone Using a Force 10 Cabin Heater?
If you like acetone, try starting a rebuilt diesel that don't wanna start with unseated rings in a shop with the wind blowing back in on you. Acetone? Pfftt!
- tego
- Gold Member
- Posts: 454
- Joined: Thu May 09, 2013 2:22 pm
- Home Port: Cherokee Resort and Marina - Tellico River near Vonore, TN
- Location: Maryville, TN
Re: Anyone Using a Force 10 Cabin Heater?
Ray, That's a great little heater you found. I'm also a 27FC guy but I used one like yours on my Pearson 424 for 13 years of living aboard. We'd turn it on in the fall and shut it down in the spring while we were in Mass. for three years and on the Chesapeake for 3 years. A note of caution, when you install the ss plate to protect your wood, use some small 1/4" spacers behind the ss plate to allow air to circulate behind it. Your wood will get warm but not enough to cause any problems. Make sure you mount it where nobody can stumble against it and put a shield over the flue pipe so nobody can grab it accidentally. We never had a problem with ours, but I did both of the above. Ben
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- Gold Member
- Posts: 2777
- Joined: Sun Mar 09, 2014 3:58 pm
- Home Port: Peoria, AZ USA
Re: Anyone Using a Force 10 Cabin Heater?
For A27 guys this is what the forward cabin on the A25 looks like. The bulkhead Ray is talking about is at right in this picture. The hanging locker closet is visible to the right (starboard side) in this photo. Behind that is the enclosed head. So really, options for heater placement are limited in the A25. At the very least it takes up some of the seating space on the starboard settee, and as it is seating is limited.
So Ray, are you talking about mounting above the shelf over the closet or on the front wall of the closet? The shelf would seem like a better option if there's room for it. I can see why the propane version might be more desirable, since the diesel burners remind me of those on the old pressurized alcohol "curtain burner" galley stoves. That whole thing about pre-heating the burners (hint, gelled alcohol works better as a priming fuel than using liquid alcohol) gives me the willies. We had one of those old pressurized galley stoves on the first sailboat I bought in 1998, which was a 1980 Windrose 25, and if you didn't pre-heat the burners sufficiently to vaporize the fuel they would tend to flare up, hence the nickname "curtain burners". Don't know how a diesel heater reacts, but at best would guess you'd end up with a smokey, stinky cabin.
What we use for heat, which in our case being in the desert Southwest is not very often, is to use a small electric heater when plugged to shore power at the dock, or an Origo 5000 Heat Pal non pressurized alcohol heater (same principle of operation as the Origo galley stoves) when at anchor. With this we just set it on the cabin floor, and the 5000 BTU warms the cabin in a matter of minutes, and then set it out in the cockpit & with the canvas enclosure zipped up can warm the cockpit too. What I do for storing the alcohol fuel for both the Origo galley stove and the Heat Pal is keep a 1 qt "ready bottle" of fuel in an MSR back packer's fuel bottle, and refill that from a 1 gallon can as needed.
Here's a Practical Sailor write up on these. You can find used ones on Ebay fairly reasonable.
http://www.practical-sailor.com/issues/ ... 894-1.html
By the way Ray, you know I'm an old Barnegat native, having moved away from NJ 50 years ago this year to Upstate NY in the late 1960s & now in my 40th year of living in AZ. We're planning a big 8,000 mile road trip by car after Labor Day this year, circumnavigating the country visiting friends & relatives from Colorado to Maine to Florida and Mississippi, with hopefully a stop to see my half-brother in Manahawkin and another half-brother in Ft. Pierce, FL maybe even take the Cape May ferry over to Delaware on the way South to Florida before returning to AZ via I-10. Would be fun to drop by on the way through & see your boat & compare notes.
So Ray, are you talking about mounting above the shelf over the closet or on the front wall of the closet? The shelf would seem like a better option if there's room for it. I can see why the propane version might be more desirable, since the diesel burners remind me of those on the old pressurized alcohol "curtain burner" galley stoves. That whole thing about pre-heating the burners (hint, gelled alcohol works better as a priming fuel than using liquid alcohol) gives me the willies. We had one of those old pressurized galley stoves on the first sailboat I bought in 1998, which was a 1980 Windrose 25, and if you didn't pre-heat the burners sufficiently to vaporize the fuel they would tend to flare up, hence the nickname "curtain burners". Don't know how a diesel heater reacts, but at best would guess you'd end up with a smokey, stinky cabin.
What we use for heat, which in our case being in the desert Southwest is not very often, is to use a small electric heater when plugged to shore power at the dock, or an Origo 5000 Heat Pal non pressurized alcohol heater (same principle of operation as the Origo galley stoves) when at anchor. With this we just set it on the cabin floor, and the 5000 BTU warms the cabin in a matter of minutes, and then set it out in the cockpit & with the canvas enclosure zipped up can warm the cockpit too. What I do for storing the alcohol fuel for both the Origo galley stove and the Heat Pal is keep a 1 qt "ready bottle" of fuel in an MSR back packer's fuel bottle, and refill that from a 1 gallon can as needed.
Here's a Practical Sailor write up on these. You can find used ones on Ebay fairly reasonable.
http://www.practical-sailor.com/issues/ ... 894-1.html
By the way Ray, you know I'm an old Barnegat native, having moved away from NJ 50 years ago this year to Upstate NY in the late 1960s & now in my 40th year of living in AZ. We're planning a big 8,000 mile road trip by car after Labor Day this year, circumnavigating the country visiting friends & relatives from Colorado to Maine to Florida and Mississippi, with hopefully a stop to see my half-brother in Manahawkin and another half-brother in Ft. Pierce, FL maybe even take the Cape May ferry over to Delaware on the way South to Florida before returning to AZ via I-10. Would be fun to drop by on the way through & see your boat & compare notes.
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La Dolce Vita
1971 Albin 25 #736
Yanmar 3GM30F
Gig Harbor Boatworks Nisqually 8 dinghy
Residence: Peoria, AZ
Homeport: Lake Pleasant, AZ & beyond
1971 Albin 25 #736
Yanmar 3GM30F
Gig Harbor Boatworks Nisqually 8 dinghy
Residence: Peoria, AZ
Homeport: Lake Pleasant, AZ & beyond
-
- Gold Member
- Posts: 475
- Joined: Wed Aug 04, 2010 11:21 am
- Home Port: Vero Beach FL
Re: Anyone Using a Force 10 Cabin Heater?
those may work well in the dry AZ climate but we used one years ago on our Tartan 27 on the Chesapeake and even with ports open (yeah that really helped the boat warm up!) we had lots of moisture inside the boat. I my experience a vented heater is much preferred
-
- Gold Member
- Posts: 2777
- Joined: Sun Mar 09, 2014 3:58 pm
- Home Port: Peoria, AZ USA
Re: Anyone Using a Force 10 Cabin Heater?
If money were no object ($2,500 ouch!) a Wallas combo diesel galley stove/cabin heater might be the way to go. Draws combustion air in from outside & exhausts overboard for heat plus flameless cooking that solves the space issue & doesn't add moisture to the cabin. A friend of ours has one on a C-Dory 25 & they work great. But you know, the C-Dory 25 is a $70K to $90K boat, not a poor man's trawler like the A25.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XgrcYmQ0cRA
http://www.wallas.fi/index.php?id=61
I looked up the price on these, and they're a bit more than I'm ready to spend since our current setup works for us. But they should fit & work OK in the A25 galley & can run off the main diesel fuel tank if one can afford it. They do however use some electricity, 0.55 to 0.85 Amps @12VDC, and apparently are somewhat sensitive to low voltage.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=XgrcYmQ0cRA
http://www.wallas.fi/index.php?id=61
I looked up the price on these, and they're a bit more than I'm ready to spend since our current setup works for us. But they should fit & work OK in the A25 galley & can run off the main diesel fuel tank if one can afford it. They do however use some electricity, 0.55 to 0.85 Amps @12VDC, and apparently are somewhat sensitive to low voltage.
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La Dolce Vita
1971 Albin 25 #736
Yanmar 3GM30F
Gig Harbor Boatworks Nisqually 8 dinghy
Residence: Peoria, AZ
Homeport: Lake Pleasant, AZ & beyond
1971 Albin 25 #736
Yanmar 3GM30F
Gig Harbor Boatworks Nisqually 8 dinghy
Residence: Peoria, AZ
Homeport: Lake Pleasant, AZ & beyond
- stxray
- Gold Member
- Posts: 149
- Joined: Thu Nov 12, 2015 8:25 pm
- Home Port: Sea Isle City, NJ
- Location: Southeast Pennsylvania / Sea Isle City, New Jersey
Re: Anyone Using a Force 10 Cabin Heater?
Ben, Great point. Thanks.tego wrote: A note of caution, when you install the ss plate to protect your wood, use some small 1/4" spacers behind the ss plate to allow air to circulate behind it. Your wood will get warm but not enough to cause any problems. Make sure you mount it where nobody can stumble against it and put a shield over the flue pipe so nobody can grab it accidentally. We never had a problem with ours, but I did both of the above. Ben
Al Dente
1975 Albin 25 Deluxe, Hull #2350
Volvo Penta MD3B
Dinghy: 7'2" Achilles Inflatable w/ 2 Hp Honda
Residence: Southeast Pennsylvania
Homeport: Sea Isle City, NJ
1975 Albin 25 Deluxe, Hull #2350
Volvo Penta MD3B
Dinghy: 7'2" Achilles Inflatable w/ 2 Hp Honda
Residence: Southeast Pennsylvania
Homeport: Sea Isle City, NJ
- stxray
- Gold Member
- Posts: 149
- Joined: Thu Nov 12, 2015 8:25 pm
- Home Port: Sea Isle City, NJ
- Location: Southeast Pennsylvania / Sea Isle City, New Jersey
Re: Anyone Using a Force 10 Cabin Heater?
I don't think there is enough room to place it on the shelf. It would be way to high and way too close to the cabin roof/ceiling.DesertAlbin736 wrote:...So Ray, are you talking about mounting above the shelf over the closet or on the front wall of the closet? The shelf would seem like a better option if there's room for it.
Not a bad idea but I already bought this thing.DesertAlbin736 wrote:What we use for heat, ...
Absolutely! Let me know your plans and we'll put something together.DesertAlbin736 wrote:By the way Ray, you know I'm an old Barnegat native, having moved away from NJ 50 years ago this year to Upstate NY in the late 1960s & now in my 40th year of living in AZ. We're planning a big 8,000 mile road trip by car after Labor Day this year, circumnavigating the country visiting friends & relatives from Colorado to Maine to Florida and Mississippi, with hopefully a stop to see my half-brother in Manahawkin and another half-brother in Ft. Pierce, FL maybe even take the Cape May ferry over to Delaware on the way South to Florida before returning to AZ via I-10. Would be fun to drop by on the way through & see your boat & compare notes.
Al Dente
1975 Albin 25 Deluxe, Hull #2350
Volvo Penta MD3B
Dinghy: 7'2" Achilles Inflatable w/ 2 Hp Honda
Residence: Southeast Pennsylvania
Homeport: Sea Isle City, NJ
1975 Albin 25 Deluxe, Hull #2350
Volvo Penta MD3B
Dinghy: 7'2" Achilles Inflatable w/ 2 Hp Honda
Residence: Southeast Pennsylvania
Homeport: Sea Isle City, NJ
- stxray
- Gold Member
- Posts: 149
- Joined: Thu Nov 12, 2015 8:25 pm
- Home Port: Sea Isle City, NJ
- Location: Southeast Pennsylvania / Sea Isle City, New Jersey
Re: Anyone Using a Force 10 Cabin Heater?
Nice but way out of my budget.DesertAlbin736 wrote:If money were no object ($2,500 ouch!) a Wallas combo diesel galley stove/cabin heater might be the way to go.
Al Dente
1975 Albin 25 Deluxe, Hull #2350
Volvo Penta MD3B
Dinghy: 7'2" Achilles Inflatable w/ 2 Hp Honda
Residence: Southeast Pennsylvania
Homeport: Sea Isle City, NJ
1975 Albin 25 Deluxe, Hull #2350
Volvo Penta MD3B
Dinghy: 7'2" Achilles Inflatable w/ 2 Hp Honda
Residence: Southeast Pennsylvania
Homeport: Sea Isle City, NJ
-
- Gold Member
- Posts: 2777
- Joined: Sun Mar 09, 2014 3:58 pm
- Home Port: Peoria, AZ USA
Re: Anyone Using a Force 10 Cabin Heater?
Same here. That's why I don't have one either. Will keep you posted on our travel plans, but as of this writing likely to be passing through NJ sometime in mid-September.Nice but way out of my budget.
La Dolce Vita
1971 Albin 25 #736
Yanmar 3GM30F
Gig Harbor Boatworks Nisqually 8 dinghy
Residence: Peoria, AZ
Homeport: Lake Pleasant, AZ & beyond
1971 Albin 25 #736
Yanmar 3GM30F
Gig Harbor Boatworks Nisqually 8 dinghy
Residence: Peoria, AZ
Homeport: Lake Pleasant, AZ & beyond
- stxray
- Gold Member
- Posts: 149
- Joined: Thu Nov 12, 2015 8:25 pm
- Home Port: Sea Isle City, NJ
- Location: Southeast Pennsylvania / Sea Isle City, New Jersey
Re: Anyone Using a Force 10 Cabin Heater?
Great! I may even be in the water by then. PM me with the specifics as it gets closer. I'd love an opportunity to compare notes and pick your brain (relative to the A25, )DesertAlbin736 wrote:Same here. That's why I don't have one either. Will keep you posted on our travel plans, but as of this writing likely to be passing through NJ sometime in mid-September.Nice but way out of my budget.
Al Dente
1975 Albin 25 Deluxe, Hull #2350
Volvo Penta MD3B
Dinghy: 7'2" Achilles Inflatable w/ 2 Hp Honda
Residence: Southeast Pennsylvania
Homeport: Sea Isle City, NJ
1975 Albin 25 Deluxe, Hull #2350
Volvo Penta MD3B
Dinghy: 7'2" Achilles Inflatable w/ 2 Hp Honda
Residence: Southeast Pennsylvania
Homeport: Sea Isle City, NJ