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Freshwater Puffin - Albin 25
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- Gold Member
- Posts: 2777
- Joined: Sun Mar 09, 2014 3:58 pm
- Home Port: Peoria, AZ USA
Re: Freshwater Puffin - Albin 25
That's a real job! So what we're seeing in the bottom photo is the head compartment where the bulkhead at left is the aft wall of the hanging closet and just visible at lower left is the flush water inlet through hull for a marine head and the through hull & ball valve at middle right is for the vanity sink drain?
What our POs had done when they did an interior restoration was use white leather grain naugahyde material for all the interior walls below deck level. They eliminated the vanity sink and put a small shelf unit in its place.
This was how the head looked we we first got the boat, and now since I upgraded the Y valve to one that can be sealed or locked in the pump out position. You can see the naugahyde is not quite as bright white clean as it used to be after 7 years worth of six week summer cruises.
Everything else, like the cabin overheads & sides above deck level were painted white. They made the curtains for the front & aft cabin rear windows & added mini blinds for the side windows, plus all new cushions. We paid a premium price for the boat, but it saved us a lot of work considering we really don't have a good place with access to electricity where we can do that kind of work except occasionally parking on the street in front of our house in our HOA tract home neighborhood for a few hours at a time.. You'll have something to be proud of when Puffin is fully restored.
What our POs had done when they did an interior restoration was use white leather grain naugahyde material for all the interior walls below deck level. They eliminated the vanity sink and put a small shelf unit in its place.
This was how the head looked we we first got the boat, and now since I upgraded the Y valve to one that can be sealed or locked in the pump out position. You can see the naugahyde is not quite as bright white clean as it used to be after 7 years worth of six week summer cruises.
Everything else, like the cabin overheads & sides above deck level were painted white. They made the curtains for the front & aft cabin rear windows & added mini blinds for the side windows, plus all new cushions. We paid a premium price for the boat, but it saved us a lot of work considering we really don't have a good place with access to electricity where we can do that kind of work except occasionally parking on the street in front of our house in our HOA tract home neighborhood for a few hours at a time.. You'll have something to be proud of when Puffin is fully restored.
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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
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- First Mate
- Posts: 135
- Joined: Mon Aug 13, 2018 11:19 pm
- Home Port: Traverse City, Mi
Re: Freshwater Puffin - Albin 25
Yes, that’s the little hanging closet on the left, the thru hull on the right of the floor of the head was unused, the sink and cabinet in that corner were not hooked up to anything, and as there’s a sink 18” away out the door, so it got deleted. Plus, a thru hull with a 1/4 turn handle that’s not hooked to anything is trouble waiting.
There’s another smaller thru hull under the closet that was connected to the head, but I’m going to cap that one and try to figure a head/hose arrangement to use the one directly under.
I found remnants of vinyl wallpaper behind the bulkhead, so I suspect that it was originally on the inside of the hull there. I’m going to seal it up with some Jamestown topside primer and paint and get things out back together, then figure out what (if anything) to do from there.
Once I put things back together, I have a small shore power distribution panel to locate, just enough for a battery charger and some galley outlets. The non operational fridge needs to come out and. A new counter fit for the original alcohol stove is intended to be reinstated.
We launched last year on 6/5, and I think we will miss that by a week or two, with the list I have in front of me.
Jason
There’s another smaller thru hull under the closet that was connected to the head, but I’m going to cap that one and try to figure a head/hose arrangement to use the one directly under.
I found remnants of vinyl wallpaper behind the bulkhead, so I suspect that it was originally on the inside of the hull there. I’m going to seal it up with some Jamestown topside primer and paint and get things out back together, then figure out what (if anything) to do from there.
Once I put things back together, I have a small shore power distribution panel to locate, just enough for a battery charger and some galley outlets. The non operational fridge needs to come out and. A new counter fit for the original alcohol stove is intended to be reinstated.
We launched last year on 6/5, and I think we will miss that by a week or two, with the list I have in front of me.
Jason
DesertAlbin736 wrote: ↑Thu May 27, 2021 4:23 pm That's a real job! So what we're seeing in the bottom photo is the head compartment where the bulkhead at left is the aft wall of the hanging closet and just visible at lower left is the flush water inlet through hull for a marine head and the through hull & ball valve at middle right is for the vanity sink drain?
What our POs had done when they did an interior restoration was use white leather grain naugahyde material for all the interior walls below deck level. They eliminated the vanity sink and put a small shelf unit in its place.
Albin_head_.jpg
This was how the head looked we we first got the boat, and now since I upgraded the Y valve to one that can be sealed or locked in the pump out position. You can see the naugahyde is not quite as bright white clean as it used to be after 7 years worth of six week summer cruises.
20200114_175041.jpg
Everything else, like the cabin overheads & sides above deck level were painted white. They made the curtains for the front & aft cabin rear windows & added mini blinds for the side windows, plus all new cushions. We paid a premium price for the boat, but it saved us a lot of work considering we really don't have a good place with access to electricity where we can do that kind of work except occasionally parking on the street in front of our house in our HOA tract home neighborhood for a few hours at a time.. You'll have something to be proud of when Puffin is fully restored.
Albin wardrobe.jpg
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- First Mate
- Posts: 135
- Joined: Mon Aug 13, 2018 11:19 pm
- Home Port: Traverse City, Mi
Re: Freshwater Puffin - Albin 25
Figure everyone loves updates, right?
One of my issues from last season was a deteriorating battery box, finally sorted out how I’m addressing that issue.
After removing the unused transducer and making those repairs, I had a blank slate under the helm, aside from wiring making its way through there. I’m not wild on having that bundle of wires just sitting on the floor, so was thinking it’d be nice to be able to ‘catch’ those with a new tray setup.
I didn’t find a lot of good options for a pre-molded box for the batteries I’m using, so I did get ahold of these cheap trays with a bolt down system, meant to be screwed or bolted to a floor. From there, I wanted to have enough room between the engine bilge and the tray to get a hand in there to clean. Making it sturdy was also high on the list.
I used some fiberglass 1.5” angle as my structural pieces, fixing one through the helm bulkhead and hull rib, and I epoxied a second bracing bracket onto the hull further aft. I am using a support leg made of laminated 3/4” treated ply as a support, and another piece of fiber angle for my aft attachment point. Finding a level reference is difficult, I ended up using the engine bilge rim as my guide for level, managed pretty well. Having the engine cover off helped a ton with access.
From there, I dug around in the basement and came up with these HDPE molded grating cover sections I had received as a sample, they’re a little long, but look better long than cutoff I think.
Each section of grating cover gets (2) 1/4” stainless bolts per end, and then my cheapie trays will bolt through the grating. I may end up just putting in a tie down point for a battery strap, depending on how the trays feel after install, I don’t have a lot of confidence in the upper frame rigidity, and I don’t want to be dealing with this on the water. I think I can hang some cable management items off the starboard side of the ‘tray’ to get my bundle of cables off the hull too.
I can add sides and a top of needed, but I’m not seeing that as urgent right now. Pardon my legs and feet being included, tight quarters and nowhere else to go..
Jason
One of my issues from last season was a deteriorating battery box, finally sorted out how I’m addressing that issue.
After removing the unused transducer and making those repairs, I had a blank slate under the helm, aside from wiring making its way through there. I’m not wild on having that bundle of wires just sitting on the floor, so was thinking it’d be nice to be able to ‘catch’ those with a new tray setup.
I didn’t find a lot of good options for a pre-molded box for the batteries I’m using, so I did get ahold of these cheap trays with a bolt down system, meant to be screwed or bolted to a floor. From there, I wanted to have enough room between the engine bilge and the tray to get a hand in there to clean. Making it sturdy was also high on the list.
I used some fiberglass 1.5” angle as my structural pieces, fixing one through the helm bulkhead and hull rib, and I epoxied a second bracing bracket onto the hull further aft. I am using a support leg made of laminated 3/4” treated ply as a support, and another piece of fiber angle for my aft attachment point. Finding a level reference is difficult, I ended up using the engine bilge rim as my guide for level, managed pretty well. Having the engine cover off helped a ton with access.
From there, I dug around in the basement and came up with these HDPE molded grating cover sections I had received as a sample, they’re a little long, but look better long than cutoff I think.
Each section of grating cover gets (2) 1/4” stainless bolts per end, and then my cheapie trays will bolt through the grating. I may end up just putting in a tie down point for a battery strap, depending on how the trays feel after install, I don’t have a lot of confidence in the upper frame rigidity, and I don’t want to be dealing with this on the water. I think I can hang some cable management items off the starboard side of the ‘tray’ to get my bundle of cables off the hull too.
I can add sides and a top of needed, but I’m not seeing that as urgent right now. Pardon my legs and feet being included, tight quarters and nowhere else to go..
Jason
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- First Mate
- Posts: 135
- Joined: Mon Aug 13, 2018 11:19 pm
- Home Port: Traverse City, Mi
Re: Freshwater Puffin - Albin 25
Engine cover insulation; first a layer of the adhesive flexible damping mat, overlapped seams:
On top of that is a layer of 1/2” adhesive foam with reflective coating, seams taped with aluminum tape:
I am pretty happy with how it all turned out with perhaps the exception of the inspection cover finish on the foam, it landed and stuck a bit early (or I didn’t trim enough) and I have foam exposed at the opening. Haven’t sorted what (if anything) to do about that.
I used scrap to apply to the inside of the aluminum inspection cover, just to keep that from being too hot on bare feet.
Finishing cover paint now, waiting for cure time and then taping off for non-slip on top of cover..
Jason
On top of that is a layer of 1/2” adhesive foam with reflective coating, seams taped with aluminum tape:
I am pretty happy with how it all turned out with perhaps the exception of the inspection cover finish on the foam, it landed and stuck a bit early (or I didn’t trim enough) and I have foam exposed at the opening. Haven’t sorted what (if anything) to do about that.
I used scrap to apply to the inside of the aluminum inspection cover, just to keep that from being too hot on bare feet.
Finishing cover paint now, waiting for cure time and then taping off for non-slip on top of cover..
Jason
- ppaalo
- First Mate
- Posts: 28
- Joined: Sun Sep 09, 2018 2:29 pm
- Home Port: Siuntio
Re: Freshwater Puffin - Albin 25
That looks really good! Wish I had taken the time to take the cover out when applying my damping mat, mine looks horrible compared to this. I did also use aluminium tape in the seams but that fell off after some time of being in the heat, might be just that the dampening mat I have ("foamy" texture) isn't the best bond for the tape.
1970 Albin 25, no. 465 "Skumpan"
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- First Mate
- Posts: 431
- Joined: Sun Jul 15, 2018 1:43 am
- Home Port: Rockland, Maine
- Location: Mid coast Maine
Re: Freshwater Puffin - Albin 25
Looks like it would look just fine if you were to cut the grates a bit shorter. To that cross piece just before the battery trays.
-
- First Mate
- Posts: 135
- Joined: Mon Aug 13, 2018 11:19 pm
- Home Port: Traverse City, Mi
Re: Freshwater Puffin - Albin 25
Thanks, I'm hoping that the aluminum tape will stay stuck to the foil facing of the foam, it seems pretty well adhered, and when it heats up, I'm hoping that it will really bond them together. My biggest issue was having the adhesive foam land on the underlying mat and really stick, like around the inspection cover, it stuck a bit early there and looks a little unfinished..
Jason
Jason
ppaalo wrote: ↑Thu Jun 10, 2021 2:14 am That looks really good! Wish I had taken the time to take the cover out when applying my damping mat, mine looks horrible compared to this. I did also use aluminium tape in the seams but that fell off after some time of being in the heat, might be just that the dampening mat I have ("foamy" texture) isn't the best bond for the tape.
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- First Mate
- Posts: 135
- Joined: Mon Aug 13, 2018 11:19 pm
- Home Port: Traverse City, Mi
Re: Freshwater Puffin - Albin 25
It might end up that way, I could see adding a single long brace to catch all the fixing bolts, just to further lock things down, but it seems pretty good as is. At this point, I need to bolt down the trays and do a test fit, probably early next week?
I am thinking that a dual battery tender type charger will be included here, might just be enough real estate to land on the overhanging grates if I'm really lucky, might look like I planned it that way. That way when we're on shore power, batteries are being topped off..
Jason
I am thinking that a dual battery tender type charger will be included here, might just be enough real estate to land on the overhanging grates if I'm really lucky, might look like I planned it that way. That way when we're on shore power, batteries are being topped off..
Jason
Dieselram94 wrote: ↑Thu Jun 10, 2021 8:50 am Looks like it would look just fine if you were to cut the grates a bit shorter. To that cross piece just before the battery trays.
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- First Mate
- Posts: 135
- Joined: Mon Aug 13, 2018 11:19 pm
- Home Port: Traverse City, Mi
Re: Freshwater Puffin - Albin 25
Anti-skid applied and curing, hoping I can reinstall the engine cover next week, one more thing (almost) done.
Jason
Jason
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- First Mate
- Posts: 289
- Joined: Thu Jul 19, 2018 4:14 pm
- Home Port: ganges
Re: Freshwater Puffin - Albin 25
Nice work! That insulation looks very good.
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- Gold Member
- Posts: 2281
- Joined: Wed Nov 13, 2013 10:48 am
- Home Port: Hood Canal, WA
Re: Freshwater Puffin - Albin 25
Yes that does look very nice. I could never do that on the WillieC as I'd have to bring the rest of it up to snuff.
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- Gold Member
- Posts: 2777
- Joined: Sun Mar 09, 2014 3:58 pm
- Home Port: Peoria, AZ USA
Re: Freshwater Puffin - Albin 25
Primo work!
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
-
- First Mate
- Posts: 431
- Joined: Sun Jul 15, 2018 1:43 am
- Home Port: Rockland, Maine
- Location: Mid coast Maine
Re: Freshwater Puffin - Albin 25
Excellent!!!