Hi guys, great video. We bought a double inflatable kayak, Advanced Elements, for use on our live aboard catamaran and it has been amazing. We use it more than the dinghy. It works for us as we have spaces to store it when underway; inflated, semi inflated or fully deflated. So inflatable kayak is a big hit for us. And in case you're wondering, we don't get any kickbacks from Advanced Elements, we're just very happy with it. Cam and Jan, SV Fallado.
17:44 - I had the same problem with my socket set. I just got a thin piece of foam, cut it to fit inside, and closed it up. It's been working for over 25 years. No need to sell a perfectly good set of sockets. Although, I do agree with all the engineering that goes on in making the sockets and case, they could have done a better job getting them to fit more snugly! ;-)
I m smiling the hole time except when I am laughing at Ryan dead stare you guys are a blast. About tools one thing when buying battery operated tools get brushless no brushes for the salt water to corrode they will last linger. Allan
I really applaud you guys for wearing the life vests when you’re not on the hook. The modern vests you have are so comfortable these days that you hardly notice them so there should be no excuse. I sail a 70’ offshore racer which although gets up to quite a lick... I’d still wear the vest if we were bimberling at next to no speed. People need to wake up! Nobody intends to go overboard but s.h.1.t happens, and your chances of rescue in one piece go up massively. WRT the Spinlock tethers - they’re really intended for use with jackstays or the rated hard-points. Their load rating is one of the highest, maybe more relevant when offshore at 20+kts boat speed; but if you were to use some of your deck rail furniture you can clip it back on itself to form a loop arnd the item as a temporary fix, but you probably knew this already. You are both setting a really positive/modern example...bravo. Your attitudes to safety is spot-on, not just with the vest; but in general. Keep raising the bar!!! 👍🏻
Great points Ian. I almost bought the spinlock jackets, but got another very good make. After 3 days wearing them they start to get real old in the comfort stakes. Next time ...
Hi Ian, The life jacket thing is so hard. I get why people dont wear them... there are so many days you just want to sit in the deck, in the sun and the waves are flat. But things happen, most the time when the weather is good so we make this choice, though we have to remind eachother from time to time. The spinlock tethers... the biggest issue we had with them is the mouth and the ability to open them one handed. The Kong just work a lot better with that respect. With all tethers you have load issues if the tether gets a side load, there are some big accidents where this has happen but i dont think this is a kong or spinlock issue but a general limitation of the design. My personal goal is to create a better boating/ sailing culture with regards to safey and decision making. We all wear safety belts in cars (but this took years of work) we can do better with boats. Ryan
Ryan, Dude... Those goggley Glasses are TOO COOL! I can't remember that actors name but,,,, He flew the gyrocopter in Mad Max... With that bling, you are a serious twin. Happy Landings.... LMAO
Thanks Jay... Its how i look everytime i know i have to open that tool box. I honestly dont understand how a normal person could engineer something like that. Ryan
Excellent Videos. Very Informative! Regarding your harness 'tethers', try placing Dyneema Soft Shackle(s) on certain strong-holds (such at tubing on your steering binnacle) to make it easy for any size tether 'carabiner' to quickly clip into. We installed Dyneema Soft Shackles on the hand-rails running across the top of our canopy (Gemini 105Mc) so we may clip into and then onto the next, while always staying tethered. Thanks! Franklin Viola
You are so confused with the units at 2:27 and 4:10 with those "amps per hour"! If any of the engineers at that battery company of yours were watching they're feeling embarrassed. Please allow me to help because that's like telling *both* your distance *and* speed with "knots per hour" that is never correct (except, technically, for expressing acceleration, but in practice it's nonsense). Amphours for battery capacity (charge), "Ah" for short. Amps for current draw or production (current, "A" for short - when you multiply by time you get how many amphours a load has drawn. A *rate* of units of charge being moved about.) Watts for power. "W" for short; an instantaneous measurement. The *rate* of how much *work* (joules per second) is being done at some INSTANT of time. Watthours for energy, "Wh" for short, and "kWh" just means thousands of watthours (kilo is 1000x.) Refer to product manuals or datasheets, read your power/current/energy meters, and don't change the units you saw when you talk about what you read.
Hello... thanks for your comment but your missing the point of these videos. They are here to help normal people understand complex topics. Breaking down like this has helped many people... and yes i well aware of the technocal terminology. Ryan .
@@RyanSophieSailing Teaching basic terminology incorrectly is a major disservice though, because nobody can make heads or tails of it when applying it. Imagine sailing after having learned port and starboard backwards. I appreciate your effort put into these videos and I just wanted to help improve them that much more.
Nice as always , about the tools , just put a foom (expandebal) in between so the can`t move until you open the box, esy fix =) , about the potatobag, have vegetables in it like a net , cheers from Sweden , hej o hå !!!
Lover,loved loved this 20 minutes of pure entertainment. Thanks for that, So enjoying you guys, and good to see that Ryan has lightened up in front of the camera.
Sophie, I am confident you are the best cook of all the cruisers! Yeah! FYI Sophie & Ryan, the U.S dollar sign $ goes in front of the number, as in $2,000. However, the U.S. Cent sign ¢ goes behind the number, as in .25¢. :¬) Webhead USA
Thanks for a very useful video. I would say my experience of Sunbeam panels was very different. I put two panels on my boat and fixed then to the deck with the supplied 3M patches and then connect them to the moonbeam MPPT controller and they worked brilliantly the two panels output 100 watts on Christmas Day in the Solent. Hardly a sunny location. They also kept the batteries fully charged and ran a small fridge all summer. So I was very pleased with them. Brexit has made them much harder to get and more expensive in the U.K. So I was glad I got mine 2 days before Brexit.
Solar panels: On land, I have 100 watt framed 35.6 X 25.9 inch solar panels. ( smaller and stubbier ). While yours are premium, it seems that smaller are less likely to break and less of a catastrophe if you break one or two. A circumstance where you would break one is a rope with a hard end tossing around. On land, the very cheapest panels I could buy were stubby 100 watts. Most of the savings came in shipping. The gods shined on me. I didn't crimp MC4 connectors. I soldered them.
Excellent video as always guys. I love your channel. I’m in the process of buying a 1994 Moody 38, could Ryan tell me ore about his Lithium battery company? I have a lot to upgrade on the boat and lithium is a priority as I will be doing the ARC. Stay safe
For electrical connections look up dielectric grease. I'm surprised how many videos I see of cruisers doing DIY electrical on boats (salt water environment???) without using this. It's a non-conductive grease that you put on electrical connections (usually) before you make the connection. Then when you twist, crimp, screw down to make the connection the grease gets pushed out of the way so you get the normal electrical connection, but surrounding it is a grease that keeps out moisture and air - so no corrosion. I have a tube of it that's at least 40 years old that I bought for outdoor connections, it's never caused a short. There are sprays that you can put on afterwards. (What I think I'd do is go around with contact cleaner spray, give a good spritz and then after it dries spray on the after dielectric coating. Some say petroleum jelly. What you need is something that's not going to drip out of the connection when temperatures rise. So nothing else, sure. Here's a tip for sea sickness cures: Bonine, Dramamine and ginger. Fresh air, take the helm, look at the horizon - or total darkness, warm blanket fetal position, bucket. Don't look at anything close up on the boat. Everything else is total BS. For Ginger I got the capsules. Okay. Fresh ginger - yes it works but difficult to eat raw. Ginger candies (easy to make) very tart but works the best. I was on a powerboat in Ireland in 8 foot seas with 15 other tourists. One candy each, no one got seasick. Hope the electrical tip is useful. A bit off topic but I looked it up today and realized I should've been seeing this grease on every boat electrical fix it, so I thought I'd pass it along.
One thing about the Torqeedo is the steep price of a larger or backup battery and the fact you can't plug in an even bigger external battery like a smallish LiPo With your expertise in lithium could you build us a cable with the appropriate plug and electronics to do the job? ;) You would sell quite a few. It is fine for use as a tender but the occasional longer excursion would give you some range anxiety
That was a great video with excellent and funny präsentation. How about Sails? Do you have a Gennakersystem or a winganker or such and how happy are you with them?
What country is Sophie from? Ryan is surely from here in the U.S. How did you meet? The glasses for seasickness I have never heard of. Great idea. I've never sailed but I want to. Very nice of you to make a video like this because it can save people a lot of money.
Wonderful video! A possible solution to avoid seasickness is to put an earplug in the opposite ear of your dominant hand. ie, Right-handed, left ear. Give it a try! Let me know. 🙂
A hearty shout and a big thanks to both of you for this episode. Following through your thoughts helps to get a pick out of your choices for one selfs. Fair winds and all the best from Germany!
I know I’m way late, but the solar panels won’t work well in shade if you string them all to the same controller. You need to use microinverters on each panel or use multiple mppt controllers if you expect some to be in shade when others are in sun.
Great to hear your views. Good video. Some interesting reviews around on tethers, I think you made a good move going to Kong and ditching the old ones.
Many yachting and RV channels have had the same problem with your original panels. I mean the misrepresentation of power rating. The arch solves the solar problem really well. One question about the 4G booster. How much are you guys spending on 4G data when away from your home Port? Seems like it would be a heck of an expense. Thanks for sharing.
We have our home (sweden) phone plans still. These work throughout Europe so the expense is not too bad. When we go across the pond it will be more of an issue. we will keep you post on how it works out. Ryan
@@RyanSophieSailing if you're still using the digital yacht 4g extender, should be easy enough to pick up a local sim in the Caribbean, depends a bit on where you go but I think all major destinations have 4G that's fast enough to upload YT videos in a reasonable amount of time (reasonable being hilariously subjective, for me it'd be 8 hours :D)
Great video as always ! You guys are doing such a great job on this channel!! I have loved watching you progress with it and thank you so much for sharing your lives with us!! I look forward to many more episodes. :)
Hooked me from the beginning of this video. Great time tested trustworthy info and what other kind is worth hearing. Thanks for that. And with Sophie's ever entertaining antics, faces and good nature, your videos make me always want to see more of your adventures.
„They don’t work for me but they are funny so I keep them!” Sounds like something my wife would say about me. 😂😂😂 The tools are always that way, get a lightweight toolbox and it saves room compared to the big plastic cases they came in.
I got a tool set (very little more $ than Ryan spent), the box has snap in holders for the tools. I haven't had the experience of opening them to an exodus of sockets and wrenches yet; down side, sometimes it is difficult to remove a tool from the holder. When it fails I'm getting heavy duty roll up tool holders. Fatty Goodlander says that you can just clean 'em, throw 'em all in a tool box, spray with wd40 and shut the lid. As a marine mechanic (USN), what I found was you only really use a few of tools you get in a set, and complete sets ended up in somebody's car trunk. On the engineering plants I operated and maintained, we needed mostly 1/2", 3/4", 13/16", 7/8", 15/16" plus a few odd larger sizes. REALLY large. When I became responsible for purchasing such things, I only bought the ones that we needed, in bulk. If you know what you need, that's all you need. How many of us use a 3/8" socket?
Great video segment. Our hit so far is a Dometic electric toilet. I left the Le Vac hand pump in the line for when there are electrical problems and that works very well (you have to add the flush water for that separately). We haven’t got to the personal gear yet but we will start with your jacket suggestions and the personal AIS.
Another critical issue for tethers is whether or not the hook meets the mountaineering standard for side loads. One of the findings from one of the clipper race deaths was that the tether hook released under side load when the crew got washed over.
Exactly Peter, Being a former mountain climber i'm well aware of those ratings but even with the best mountain gear the side load rating is always way less that the vertical and horizontal load ratings. the key is to en sure your climp in system is good. Ryan
I have the Navi Safe LED lights for my dinghy as well, but I got the combo that includes the bow light. The base of the bow light glues on to my Hypalon dinghy and is rock solid, the light detaches easily so you can stow it. I have no complaints about the lights themselves, they are very bright and run forever on the standard alkaline batteries (always carry some fresh spares anyway). My only gripe is the plastic vertical pole that supports the stern light, it is just crazy flexible and just bounces all over the place even in mild chop. I run a 6HP outboard on a 10.5 ft Achilles, so maybe I have a little more power and speed than Ryan & Sophie have. Anyway, the mount for the pole that you can notice in the video is supposed to be mounted toward the top edge of the transom and the pole consists of 4 sections that you screw together and they quick attach & lock to the transom mount. While it looks pretty it waves around wildly and I was seriously afraid it would just snap off at some point. So I took the transom mount and lowered it way down, essentially just shy of same length as the bottom section of the pole. Where the mount was previously located near the top edge of the transom I used a PVC tube clamp and a plastic backer to keep the spacing and it secures the entire length of the bottom pole section. Now the entire pole is supported better at two points, the only concession is that I actually have to leave that bottom section of pole in place and screw on the remaining three sections plus the light. I actually ditched one section of the pole making it shorter, but it is still taller than outboard but not taller than the helmsman running the motor tiller. So a concession or two was made but it sways and rocks about 1000% less with this set up. If I was cruising full time and never deflated and stowed my dinghy I would take the time to fab up a fiberglass or stainless steel pole that was tall and much more rigid but not necessarily detachable. As long as the LED light comes off to prevent theft I'd be happy.
Hi Kraken, we have the combo as well. I just have not gotten around to putting the rest of it on the Dighy. I dont think we go fast enough to have the issues you do with the pole but i can imagine the problems. Ryan
Hmm. those potato bags. I used cheap Mesh Bags like that, nut bigger mesh, when Motorbike touring. One for towels adtervwashing them, and one fir clothes after washing, one each for on top of each Pannier. Brilliant forced Air Dryers on a Nice Day. Wet in the Morning before a Ride Out, Ba k to the Campsite late afternoon, and everything was Dried and Aired. 👍 Out of interest, just how well do those Plastimo Fans help when the weather is hot ?
oops clicked reply. I'm thinking of skipping installing fixed air conditioning on my next boat, and going for a couple of Self contained portable AC units instead? your inverter should be able to run 2, though I'd start with one, as only 1kw for 9,000 Btu one, and plus the fans, could be all that's needed ? As much as anything for the dehumidifier function as humidity, like condensation, is terrible for boats. Glad to hear you got an induction Hob too. One of those is on my must have list . No problems with compasses from it, I'm guessing ? Best Wishes and Fair Winds. Bob. 👍
Same problem with my tool set, the way i resolve problem, in half, was to cut piece of foam mat that resemble shape of a box, this is for tools not mix when i carry box vertically and i open it only when it in horizontal position. So if your set mixes when you carry it, you can try to do same way, the only annoying thing, will be to open it in certain position.
Hey guys. Why didn’t you guys purchase a hard bottom floor inflatable? I watch many RUclips channel and find they have hard bottom inflatable as they have davits too and don’t pack it away every time!
Fantastic information video guys. We would agree with everything you said. Other than Ryan looks good in them glasses. Perhaps a water squirting flower, a bit of smiley makeup and some big floppy shoes. Mabey a new career path? Second thoughts dump the glasses!!!! Sail safe guy's. Ant Cid and the pooches xx
Good and Interesting vlog. On my novice to day skipper course our instructor had mixed views on the use of tether lines. He told me his friend drowned when he fell overboard attached to the yacht by his tether line. Basically the yacht just dragged him along under water as he could not release the line. Kong tether lines are now on the list.
Y’all continue to be my favorite tubers. Ryan, do you know what type of bike is on your t-shirt? Keep making these types of videos. They informative and fun. Thanks for sharing. Keep having fun. 👍🙏👍❤️👍😁🍺
Hi guys, great video and very helpful for those of us that are going to follow in your footsteps. It’s nice to buy quality equipment and in my humble opinion every penny is worth it to keep “Sophie, goddess of the sea” safe! Cheers
Sophie is a great Meryl Streep! Great energy!
Hi guys, great video. We bought a double inflatable kayak, Advanced Elements, for use on our live aboard catamaran and it has been amazing. We use it more than the dinghy. It works for us as we have spaces to store it when underway; inflated, semi inflated or fully deflated. So inflatable kayak is a big hit for us. And in case you're wondering, we don't get any kickbacks from Advanced Elements, we're just very happy with it. Cam and Jan, SV Fallado.
CB radio, 12 volt chest freezer...always run on ECO mode, 36 or 53 CC four cycle outboard motor.
Lots of useful gouge!
seasickness glasses definitely
the best. Hope to see them on you Sophie on again.
Thanks guys, Ryan like the glasses my friend - Sophie you do tend to get away with murder at the best of times. 😈
Oh, now I get it. 13:25. And brainy too.
17:44 - I had the same problem with my socket set. I just got a thin piece of foam, cut it to fit inside, and closed it up. It's been working for over 25 years. No need to sell a perfectly good set of sockets. Although, I do agree with all the engineering that goes on in making the sockets and case, they could have done a better job getting them to fit more snugly! ;-)
LOVED the video..
Not buying any potato bags until higher latitudes for sure. check.
hahah... yes. Maybe we will create a Ryan and Sophie branded potato bag :) Or not - Ryan
I m smiling the hole time except when I am laughing at Ryan dead stare you guys are a blast. About tools one thing when buying battery operated tools get brushless no brushes for the salt water to corrode they will last linger. Allan
I had two friends get killed in a dinghy at night in Spain.
Loved this video...but I waited the whole video in hopes that Sophie’s blow dryer would have been noted!! It should have been on hit list...lol
Valid point.... we missed this :(
Are you guys in Malta at the moment.??
Hi Georges, We were, but last week we did our first LONG sail from malta direct back to spain. Sorry to have missed you. Ryan
@@RyanSophieSailing No worries. Glad you arrived safely
Informative, educational and entertaining. Just like the BBC!! Love your videos - keep them coming.
I really applaud you guys for wearing the life vests when you’re not on the hook. The modern vests you have are so comfortable these days that you hardly notice them so there should be no excuse. I sail a 70’ offshore racer which although gets up to quite a lick... I’d still wear the vest if we were bimberling at next to no speed. People need to wake up! Nobody intends to go overboard but s.h.1.t happens, and your chances of rescue in one piece go up massively.
WRT the Spinlock tethers - they’re really intended for use with jackstays or the rated hard-points. Their load rating is one of the highest, maybe more relevant when offshore at 20+kts boat speed; but if you were to use some of your deck rail furniture you can clip it back on itself to form a loop arnd the item as a temporary fix, but you probably knew this already.
You are both setting a really positive/modern example...bravo. Your attitudes to safety is spot-on, not just with the vest; but in general. Keep raising the bar!!! 👍🏻
Great points Ian. I almost bought the spinlock jackets, but got another very good make. After 3 days wearing them they start to get real old in the comfort stakes. Next time ...
Hi Ian, The life jacket thing is so hard. I get why people dont wear them... there are so many days you just want to sit in the deck, in the sun and the waves are flat. But things happen, most the time when the weather is good so we make this choice, though we have to remind eachother from time to time.
The spinlock tethers... the biggest issue we had with them is the mouth and the ability to open them one handed. The Kong just work a lot better with that respect. With all tethers you have load issues if the tether gets a side load, there are some big accidents where this has happen but i dont think this is a kong or spinlock issue but a general limitation of the design.
My personal goal is to create a better boating/ sailing culture with regards to safey and decision making. We all wear safety belts in cars (but this took years of work) we can do better with boats. Ryan
Ryan, Dude... Those goggley Glasses are TOO COOL! I can't remember that actors name but,,,, He flew the gyrocopter in Mad Max... With that bling, you are a serious twin. Happy Landings.... LMAO
The gyrocoppter in mad max 100 % hahaha
The best part to me was Ryan's face when he opens tool box. So hilarious!!!
Thanks Jay... Its how i look everytime i know i have to open that tool box. I honestly dont understand how a normal person could engineer something like that. Ryan
Excellent Videos. Very Informative! Regarding your harness 'tethers', try placing Dyneema Soft Shackle(s) on certain strong-holds (such at tubing on your steering binnacle) to make it easy for any size tether 'carabiner' to quickly clip into. We installed Dyneema Soft Shackles on the hand-rails running across the top of our canopy (Gemini 105Mc) so we may clip into and then onto the next, while always staying tethered. Thanks! Franklin Viola
The seasickness glasses is my absolute favorite, it looks like Alastor "mad - eye" Moody from Harry Potter ... 😂😂🤣
You are so confused with the units at 2:27 and 4:10 with those "amps per hour"! If any of the engineers at that battery company of yours were watching they're feeling embarrassed. Please allow me to help because that's like telling *both* your distance *and* speed with "knots per hour" that is never correct (except, technically, for expressing acceleration, but in practice it's nonsense).
Amphours for battery capacity (charge), "Ah" for short.
Amps for current draw or production (current, "A" for short - when you multiply by time you get how many amphours a load has drawn. A *rate* of units of charge being moved about.)
Watts for power. "W" for short; an instantaneous measurement. The *rate* of how much *work* (joules per second) is being done at some INSTANT of time.
Watthours for energy, "Wh" for short, and "kWh" just means thousands of watthours (kilo is 1000x.)
Refer to product manuals or datasheets, read your power/current/energy meters, and don't change the units you saw when you talk about what you read.
Hello... thanks for your comment but your missing the point of these videos. They are here to help normal people understand complex topics. Breaking down like this has helped many people... and yes i well aware of the technocal terminology.
Ryan
.
@@RyanSophieSailing Teaching basic terminology incorrectly is a major disservice though, because nobody can make heads or tails of it when applying it. Imagine sailing after having learned port and starboard backwards. I appreciate your effort put into these videos and I just wanted to help improve them that much more.
Nice as always , about the tools , just put a foom (expandebal) in between so the can`t move until you open the box, esy fix =) , about the potatobag, have vegetables in it like a net , cheers from Sweden , hej o hå !!!
Lover,loved loved this 20 minutes of pure entertainment. Thanks for that, So enjoying you guys, and good to see that Ryan has lightened up in front of the camera.
Thanks, Sophie and Ryan, for your very interesting advice on what equipment to buy and what not!
Sophie, I am confident you are the best cook of all the cruisers! Yeah! FYI Sophie & Ryan, the U.S dollar sign $ goes in front of the number, as in $2,000. However, the U.S. Cent sign ¢ goes behind the number, as in .25¢. :¬) Webhead USA
Thanks for a very useful video. I would say my experience of Sunbeam panels was very different. I put two panels on my boat and fixed then to the deck with the supplied 3M patches and then connect them to the moonbeam MPPT controller and they worked brilliantly the two panels output 100 watts on Christmas Day in the Solent. Hardly a sunny location. They also kept the batteries fully charged and ran a small fridge all summer. So I was very pleased with them. Brexit has made them much harder to get and more expensive in the U.K. So I was glad I got mine 2 days before Brexit.
Solar panels: On land, I have 100 watt framed 35.6 X 25.9 inch solar panels. ( smaller and stubbier ). While yours are premium, it seems that smaller are less likely to break and less of a catastrophe if you break one or two. A circumstance where you would break one is a rope with a hard end tossing around. On land, the very cheapest panels I could buy were stubby 100 watts. Most of the savings came in shipping. The gods shined on me. I didn't crimp MC4 connectors. I soldered them.
Excellent video as always guys. I love your channel. I’m in the process of buying a 1994 Moody 38, could Ryan tell me ore about his Lithium battery company? I have a lot to upgrade on the boat and lithium is a priority as I will be doing the ARC. Stay safe
For electrical connections look up dielectric grease. I'm surprised how many videos I see of cruisers doing DIY electrical on boats (salt water environment???) without using this. It's a non-conductive grease that you put on electrical connections (usually) before you make the connection. Then when you twist, crimp, screw down to make the connection the grease gets pushed out of the way so you get the normal electrical connection, but surrounding it is a grease that keeps out moisture and air - so no corrosion. I have a tube of it that's at least 40 years old that I bought for outdoor connections, it's never caused a short. There are sprays that you can put on afterwards. (What I think I'd do is go around with contact cleaner spray, give a good spritz and then after it dries spray on the after dielectric coating. Some say petroleum jelly. What you need is something that's not going to drip out of the connection when temperatures rise. So nothing else, sure.
Here's a tip for sea sickness cures: Bonine, Dramamine and ginger. Fresh air, take the helm, look at the horizon - or total darkness, warm blanket fetal position, bucket. Don't look at anything close up on the boat. Everything else is total BS. For Ginger I got the capsules. Okay. Fresh ginger - yes it works but difficult to eat raw. Ginger candies (easy to make) very tart but works the best. I was on a powerboat in Ireland in 8 foot seas with 15 other tourists. One candy each, no one got seasick.
Hope the electrical tip is useful. A bit off topic but I looked it up today and realized I should've been seeing this grease on every boat electrical fix it, so I thought I'd pass it along.
One thing about the Torqeedo is the steep price of a larger or backup battery and the fact you can't plug in an even bigger external battery like a smallish LiPo
With your expertise in lithium could you build us a cable with the appropriate plug and electronics to do the job? ;)
You would sell quite a few. It is fine for use as a tender but the occasional longer excursion would give you some range anxiety
That was a great video with excellent and funny präsentation. How about Sails? Do you have a Gennakersystem or a winganker or such and how happy are you with them?
What country is Sophie from? Ryan is surely from here in the U.S. How did you meet? The glasses for seasickness I have never heard of. Great idea. I've never sailed but I want to. Very nice of you to make a video like this because it can save people a lot of money.
Wonderful video! A possible solution to avoid seasickness is to put an earplug in the opposite ear of your dominant hand. ie, Right-handed, left ear. Give it a try! Let me know. 🙂
WOW, things are expensive. Things are in euros and pounds. To the CD it is min two time more. Sophie you model the seasickness glasses well. Cheers.
Very entertaining :) -Rebecca
Should have called it hits and face plants... Just sayin...
A hearty shout and a big thanks to both of you for this episode. Following through your thoughts helps to get a pick out of your choices for one selfs. Fair winds and all the best from Germany!
Con you comment if the Spinlock life jackets are USCG approved ?
So many sailors say their walk on solar panels were a waste of money. It's good to hear sych feedback.
I know I’m way late, but the solar panels won’t work well in shade if you string them all to the same controller. You need to use microinverters on each panel or use multiple mppt controllers if you expect some to be in shade when others are in sun.
Great to hear your views. Good video. Some interesting reviews around on tethers, I think you made a good move going to Kong and ditching the old ones.
DAMN……….I’ll need 100 grand above and beyond the boat!!!
The price of your foul weather gear is stupid.
good informative video.. u need to improve your sound quality and volume.. was finding it difficult to hear most of the times
We used to use a onion sack to peel potatoes at sea, if you left them to long when was blowing they used to end up the size of marbles
Love this video guys, it’s very useful 👍🏻 Btw, I want a video showing the potato bag at work 😂 Cheers!
We will take this under advisement Alberto - Ryan
Many yachting and RV channels have had the same problem with your original panels. I mean the misrepresentation of power rating. The arch solves the solar problem really well.
One question about the 4G booster. How much are you guys spending on 4G data when away from your home Port? Seems like it would be a heck of an expense. Thanks for sharing.
Generally speaking if you buy a local SIM card (pre-paid) you're looking at about a euro per Gb of 4G data, sometimes more, sometimes less.
We have our home (sweden) phone plans still. These work throughout Europe so the expense is not too bad. When we go across the pond it will be more of an issue. we will keep you post on how it works out. Ryan
@@RyanSophieSailing if you're still using the digital yacht 4g extender, should be easy enough to pick up a local sim in the Caribbean, depends a bit on where you go but I think all major destinations have 4G that's fast enough to upload YT videos in a reasonable amount of time (reasonable being hilariously subjective, for me it'd be 8 hours :D)
Great video as always ! You guys are doing such a great job on this channel!! I have loved watching you progress with it and thank you so much for sharing your lives with us!! I look forward to many more episodes. :)
"Buy our lousy kayaks" is not what they teach you in Marketing 310!
Do not throw those potato bags away ! They are actually quite nice to use to wash dishes with at sea . Especially while soloing .
Awesome video, well done
Hilarious and informative. 👍👍
Hooked me from the beginning of this video. Great time tested trustworthy info and what other kind is worth hearing. Thanks for that. And with Sophie's ever entertaining antics, faces and good nature, your videos make me always want to see more of your adventures.
Lol, mash potatoes. You guys, I love this
video.
„They don’t work for me but they are funny so I keep them!” Sounds like something my wife would say about me. 😂😂😂
The tools are always that way, get a lightweight toolbox and it saves room compared to the big plastic cases they came in.
I got a tool set (very little more $ than Ryan spent), the box has snap in holders for the tools. I haven't had the experience of opening them to an exodus of sockets and wrenches yet; down side, sometimes it is difficult to remove a tool from the holder. When it fails I'm getting heavy duty roll up tool holders.
Fatty Goodlander says that you can just clean 'em, throw 'em all in a tool box, spray with wd40 and shut the lid.
As a marine mechanic (USN), what I found was you only really use a few of tools you get in a set, and complete sets ended up in somebody's car trunk. On the engineering plants I operated and maintained, we needed mostly 1/2", 3/4", 13/16", 7/8", 15/16" plus a few odd larger sizes. REALLY large. When I became responsible for purchasing such things, I only bought the ones that we needed, in bulk. If you know what you need, that's all you need. How many of us use a 3/8" socket?
With the tehter lines - just go around the tube and clip it into the line :) works for me :)
Great video segment. Our hit so far is a Dometic electric toilet. I left the Le Vac hand pump in the line for when there are electrical problems and that works very well (you have to add the flush water for that separately). We haven’t got to the personal gear yet but we will start with your jacket suggestions and the personal AIS.
Great safety advice on the nav light, tethers, AIS signaĺers - keep up the tech videos..as good as the sailing ones!
Loved, loved, loved this vlog !! Bookmarked it for reference as we countdown to our boat soon. Great upbeat dual presentation !! ✨🧡✨
Thanks Richard! Ryan
Another critical issue for tethers is whether or not the hook meets the mountaineering standard for side loads. One of the findings from one of the clipper race deaths was that the tether hook released under side load when the crew got washed over.
Exactly Peter, Being a former mountain climber i'm well aware of those ratings but even with the best mountain gear the side load rating is always way less that the vertical and horizontal load ratings. the key is to en sure your climp in system is good. Ryan
Wow Au$6000 for a bit of Stainless Steel arch ....
👍👍
I have the Navi Safe LED lights for my dinghy as well, but I got the combo that includes the bow light. The base of the bow light glues on to my Hypalon dinghy and is rock solid, the light detaches easily so you can stow it. I have no complaints about the lights themselves, they are very bright and run forever on the standard alkaline batteries (always carry some fresh spares anyway). My only gripe is the plastic vertical pole that supports the stern light, it is just crazy flexible and just bounces all over the place even in mild chop. I run a 6HP outboard on a 10.5 ft Achilles, so maybe I have a little more power and speed than Ryan & Sophie have. Anyway, the mount for the pole that you can notice in the video is supposed to be mounted toward the top edge of the transom and the pole consists of 4 sections that you screw together and they quick attach & lock to the transom mount. While it looks pretty it waves around wildly and I was seriously afraid it would just snap off at some point. So I took the transom mount and lowered it way down, essentially just shy of same length as the bottom section of the pole. Where the mount was previously located near the top edge of the transom I used a PVC tube clamp and a plastic backer to keep the spacing and it secures the entire length of the bottom pole section. Now the entire pole is supported better at two points, the only concession is that I actually have to leave that bottom section of pole in place and screw on the remaining three sections plus the light. I actually ditched one section of the pole making it shorter, but it is still taller than outboard but not taller than the helmsman running the motor tiller. So a concession or two was made but it sways and rocks about 1000% less with this set up. If I was cruising full time and never deflated and stowed my dinghy I would take the time to fab up a fiberglass or stainless steel pole that was tall and much more rigid but not necessarily detachable. As long as the LED light comes off to prevent theft I'd be happy.
Hi Kraken, we have the combo as well. I just have not gotten around to putting the rest of it on the Dighy. I dont think we go fast enough to have the issues you do with the pole but i can imagine the problems. Ryan
How about using Tesla battery pack?
Hmm. those potato bags. I used cheap Mesh Bags like that, nut bigger mesh, when Motorbike touring. One for towels adtervwashing them, and one fir clothes after washing, one each for on top of each Pannier. Brilliant forced Air Dryers on a Nice Day. Wet in the Morning before a Ride Out, Ba k to the Campsite late afternoon, and everything was Dried and Aired. 👍
Out of interest, just how well do those Plastimo Fans help when the weather is hot ?
oops clicked reply. I'm thinking of skipping installing fixed air conditioning on my next boat, and going for a couple of Self contained portable AC units instead? your inverter should be able to run 2, though I'd start with one, as only 1kw for 9,000 Btu one, and plus the fans, could be all that's needed ? As much as anything for the dehumidifier function as humidity, like condensation, is terrible for boats. Glad to hear you got an induction Hob too. One of those is on my must have list . No problems with compasses from it, I'm guessing ? Best Wishes and Fair Winds. Bob. 👍
Potato bag OR washing clothes/smalls bag........
Same problem with my tool set, the way i resolve problem, in half, was to cut piece of foam mat that resemble shape of a box, this is for tools not mix when i carry box vertically and i open it only when it in horizontal position. So if your set mixes when you carry it, you can try to do same way, the only annoying thing, will be to open it in certain position.
Very useful :) thank you
Guiding and giving useful information I love watching 👍
Hey guys. Why didn’t you guys purchase a hard bottom floor inflatable? I watch many RUclips channel and find they have hard bottom inflatable as they have davits too and don’t pack it away every time!
Because we love our takacat :) Ryan
Ryan, your greatest 'Hit' by far is Sophie.
I watched the socket set opening clip so many times. omg
Fantastic information video guys. We would agree with everything you said. Other than Ryan looks good in them glasses. Perhaps a water squirting flower, a bit of smiley makeup and some big floppy shoes. Mabey a new career path? Second thoughts dump the glasses!!!! Sail safe guy's. Ant Cid and the pooches xx
Ryan could use the sea sickness glasses as a waterpass....
what do you consider "too close" when a boat parks too close to you?
Good and Interesting vlog. On my novice to day skipper course our instructor had mixed views on the use of tether lines. He told me his friend drowned when he fell overboard attached to the yacht by his tether line. Basically the yacht just dragged him along under water as he could not release the line. Kong tether lines are now on the list.
Yeah, thats a risk with these Stuart. With the kong lines there is a quick release which can avoid it. Ryan
The mash potatoes bag is brilliant! Lol
Great to see you have crouch straps on your pfds so many don’t have or use them
Sophie yells at me a lot for being lax about wearing them. But yes, they are a necessity and they should be worn. Ryan
Good that some can materialize their sailing dream with much much less. Both on gear and boat size/age.
Sophie's laugh near the end was worth the whole video. You are going to need more fans.
Thanks Mark! Ryan
Great info. My favorite is Sophie's hair dryer. She always looks lovely and ready for prime time.
your best video ever
Ryan, are you a road cyclist? I noticed you have quite the bike tshirt collection. Just curious
Both triathletes…
Don't do that to his poor little piggy 👀
Great topic as usual. 👍👍👍
Heureusement que l’on peut encore naviguer avec moins de choses......
👍
Y’all continue to be my favorite tubers. Ryan, do you know what type of bike is on your t-shirt? Keep making these types of videos. They informative and fun.
Thanks for sharing.
Keep having fun.
👍🙏👍❤️👍😁🍺
No idea what type of bike it is... think i bought the shirt at old Navy (of all places) - Ryan
Brilliant - both useful and entertaining!
You guys are just brilliant the glasses just killed me, fantastic video.
Hi guys, great video and very helpful for those of us that are going to follow in your footsteps. It’s nice to buy quality equipment and in my humble opinion every penny is worth it to keep “Sophie, goddess of the sea” safe! Cheers
Quality is key... Ryan
Sophie, Hi, where did you get the skillet cover you used when you cook?
www.ikea.com/gb/en/p/klockren-lid-set-of-3-multifunctional-00333570/ These? :)
Phenomenal video! Cheers
You can always throw those sockets at motorboats that make big wakes, it's not totally useless.
Best comment ever :) Ryan
Try Sunpower maxeon.
That's a lot of money! :/
Really enjoyed that. Going to buy the teathers!
Really enjoyed the info, thanks
Well done guys!
I love the Ryan show!
The seasickness glasses are great for your career as Nono Mouskouri and from your CD record sales you become millionair! Best buy!!!!!
hahaha