Bob showed me his hull last week.  The boat was hauled and not pressure washed 
this Fall and had not been scrubbed all season.  The bottom of the hull looked 
about the same as all those that had been pressure washed by the yard.  I am 
most impressed with the anti fouling characteristics of Micon 66 compared to 
Micron CSC, VC Offshore and other high performance AF paints used in this area.

The down side is that Micron 66 is not available in Canada.  It contains higher 
levels of copper than is allowed here.  A pity since this paint would likely 
reduce hull cleaning costs by over $400 per season for a typical boat that 
races.

Mike

From: CnC-List [mailto:cnc-list-boun...@cnc-list.com] On Behalf Of Robert 
Abbott via CnC-List
Sent: Tuesday, December 23, 2014 12:43 PM
To: Bill Bina - gmail; cnc-list@cnc-list.com
Subject: Re: Stus-List Diving your own boat

Several years back, I switched antifouling paint from Micron CSC to Micron 
66...... Micron 66 is very effective in controlling algae growth, at least it 
is in our climate....for all of those that are bottom cleaning every month, 
maybe Micron 66 would minimize that work.    Just a thought.

Rob Abbott
AZURA
C&C 32 - 84
Halifax, N.S.




On 2014/12/23 12:35 PM, Bill Bina - gmail via CnC-List wrote:
I looked at Dri Diver before making my rig for about $15-$20. In fact, it was 
my original inspiration. One big difference is that my system can do the keel. 
I also wondered if the scotch brite pad might be a little too aggressive on my 
ablative bottom paint. Different strokes I guess! :-)

Bill Bina
On 12/23/2014 11:21 AM, Gary Nylander wrote:
There's an outfit called Dri-Diver which makes a device like you described. I 
hope they are still around, because I need a new scrub pad.

It is about 6 inches wide and 3 feet long. A scotch brite style pad hooks to a 
plastic (maybe 1/8 inch thick) backing strip which has half a dozen cylinders 
of floatation hooked to it (crosswise). All is attached to a plastic pipe 
handle with a bit of a bend in it. There used to be a lesser version with just 
a single floatation pad on the back, but after I wore that one out, I got the 
special model with the cylinders. The only downside is that you cannot reach 
the keel.

I use it between diver trips.

Gary
----- Original Message -----
From: Bill Bina - gmail via CnC-List<mailto:cnc-list@cnc-list.com>
To: cnc-list@cnc-list.com<mailto:cnc-list@cnc-list.com>
Sent: Tuesday, December 23, 2014 9:59 AM
Subject: Re: Stus-List Diving your own boat

I made a rig that uses an outdoor broom with stiff bristles, and some flotation 
that screws onto the end of a boat hook. It makes bottom cleaning at a slip a 
short, and relatively easy job. I'm now on a mooring, and have to work my way 
around the boat, tying the dinghy to the railing as I go. It takes a little 
longer and a little more work, but it is still not that hard to do.

I'm not a racer, so this method is more than adequate. I'm sure a diver would 
do a better job, since he can see what he is doing.

I use the same rig to do my outboard rudder from the cockpit. Screwing the 
broom head directly to the boat hook does not work very well. In addition to 
the pool noodle floation, I also added a curved extension made from plumbing so 
that the broom head is offset from the boathook by about a foot. That clearance 
makes all the difference in reaching the center area of the hull without the 
boathook hitting the hull. I think I have some pictures of this thing on my 
home computer. If I can find them, I'll post them somewhere on the web.

Bill Bina






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