Since a LPG stove/oven had been added, it was necessary to install the LPG tank somewhere. The best location I could think of was at the aft end of the cockpit. I built a wood enclosure to protect the new fiberglass LPG tank. This box has become a favorite place to sit and steer the boat from as well as a cutting board holder for filleting fish on.
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In replacing the main bulkhead, I had to remove the old structure behind the toilet in the head. When it came time to replace this I had decided to install a holding tank and a cabinet for clothing. Disliking the smell of flexible sanitary hose I opted to install rigid PVC plumbing instead, a route I have been very happy with for a number of years now.
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Long before I had purchased the Cal 29 that was to become Quagmire, a leak had developed where the wires from the mast pass through the deck and come into the cabin. Luckily the builders had foreseen this as a possible problem and had hollowed out the deck coring right around this pass-through and had filled it solid with fiberglass and resin. As a result no damage was done to the decks and their coring, only to the port side of the main bulkhead. With the damage thus 'contained' I sought about replacing the bulkhead.
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Quagmire came with the original main cabin windows which were well past their prime. All where crazed so badly it was hard to see out of them, one had a crack through it, and all of the plastic frames leaked. I replaced all four of them with new Bomon windows after first increasing the thickness of the cabin top sides to better accommodate the insulation project.
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To improve live-aboard comfort and help keep the boat dry I decided to insulate the hull above the waterline. After a few missteps, including trying rigid insulation, and working out a good way to cover the insulation the project was a success. The time investment required was tremendous but the boat is now amazingly comfortable even in cold wet weather with minimal heat.
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To increase our cruising season and allow wet clothes to be dried, a heater was the first major project we undertook with Quagmire. With a lack of bulkhead space and not wanting a vent on deck to trip over we decided on a diesel Webasto 2000 heater.
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