Thanks, I ordered the LED versions.

 

 

Joe McCary

Aeolus II, West River, MD #4795

[EMAIL PROTECTED]

 

On Behalf Of Philip J Agur



 

Joe,

 

I would go with the Aqua Marine 25 series from somewhere like Defender
Marine. DM appears to stock the complete 25 series line up, which includes a
clamp on rail mount.

http://www.defender.com/category.jsp?path=-1|17|295769|320397
<http://www.defender.com/category.jsp?path=-1|17|295769|320397&id=320408>
&id=320408 

 

Wing Tip (an example of a newer Catalina) has the series 25:

* Bi-Color Navigation Light up on the pulpit

* All Round / Anchor Light on the top of the mast

* Masthead (Steaming) / Foredeck Light 

* Stern Light up on the stern railing

 

There is also the 32 series which is LED but I don't see a clamp on rail
mount and while there is no mention of this being a strictly power boat
design that's how it appears to me. 

 

Phil Agur
<http://www.catalina27.org/public_pages/profile270.htm> s/v Wing Tip
Secretary,                    Call Sign WCW3485
IC27/270A                   MMSI 366901790 
 <http://www.catalina27.org> www.catalina27.org     Vessel Doc# 1039809

-----Original Message-----
From: [email protected]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Joe McCary
Sent: Thursday, October 23, 2008 9:37 AM
To: [email protected]
Subject: RE: catalina27-talk: Seaworthy Cover(-up) Story

 

As one who has the older nav lights (in hull), where can I get or where is
the best place to get the newer nav lights?

 

 

Joe McCary

Photo Response

[EMAIL PROTECTED]

301-529-7119

 

From: [email protected]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] On Behalf Of Kevin Morton
Sent: Wednesday, October 22, 2008 11:12 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: catalina27-talk: Seaworthy Cover(-up) Story

 


If you have an older sailoat, then technically, yes, they are
underilluminated. Newer boats have the red/green combo lights up on the
pulpit for greater visibility at a distance (and to comply with the Coast
Guard's newest requirements). Older bots with nav lights in the hull are
grandfathered in, so a change is not required, but it is wise to do anyway.

Kevin M. Morton

S/V Serenity #1920
_/)_

--- On Wed, 10/22/08, Art Snapper <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

From: Art Snapper <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: Re: catalina27-talk: Seaworthy Cover(-up) Story
To: [email protected]
Date: Wednesday, October 22, 2008, 6:57 PM

I've been following the story on S/A all summer. It  truely is a travesty of
justice.  At least Perdock's (the powerboater) wife left him.

It got me thinking about the lighting issue. I am wondering if by
regulation, sailboats are under illuminated?
It should be easy to improve lighting with LED's.

Art

On Wed, Oct 22, 2008 at 3:24 PM, Philip J Agur <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

This month's Seaworthy (a Boat US publication) features the straightened out
story of a collision between a 27 foot sailboat and a 24 foot 385hp Baja
Outlaw after dark. Much of the early reporting was in error, even in
Latitude 38 and on the SF based TV coverage because the owner/operator of
the Baja is the number 2 official at the Lake County Sheriff's department.

 

Initial coverage was exactly what the Sheriff's Department was willing to
document, a head-on collision between a drunken sailboat operator running
with no lights and an off duty Lake County Deputy Sheriff. Except for the
forensics, the death of a woman on the sailboat, the eye witnesses that
weren't allowed to give a statement coming forward, and maritime law it
would have been an open and shut case.

 

The Lake County DA is still charging the guest who had his hand on the
tiller at the time with manslaughter even though forensics on the stern
light filament shows it was on when broken, the speed limit on the lake
after dark was 5 MPH, the damaged speedometer on the Baja is jammed at 50
MPH, the sailboat was under sail, the sailboat was struck from the rear, and
the owner of the Baja was allowed to elude an on the spot breathalyzer test
and the blood drawn later at the hospital went for an hour ride with the
suspect before being logged into evidence.

 

It's a two year old case and the civil suites and insurance claims have been
settled. The only person involved that received no payout was the Sheriff's
Deputy who was the owner operator of the speeding Baja Outlaw. 

 

Morale of the story, don't let anything obscure your navigation lights
(check them every time), keep an active watch and if you hear someone coming
read their navigation lights, and don't just sit there if you're in the
path. Navigation lights are often lost in the shore lights so be prepare to
do something different. Fire up a strobe or a 1,000,000 candle power
spotlight and get yourself seen.

 

Eventually being vindicated will never make up for the person that died on
the sailboat no matter who was at fault. 

 

Phil Agur
<http://www.catalina27.org/public_pages/profile270.htm> s/v Wing Tip
Secretary,                    Call Sign WCW3485
IC27/270A                   MMSI 366901790 
www.catalina27.org <http://www.catalina27.org/>      Vessel Doc# 1039809

 



__________ Information from ESET NOD32 Antivirus, version of virus signature
database 3549 (20081023) __________

The message was checked by ESET NOD32 Antivirus.

http://www.eset.com

Reply via email to