sailing my investigator

Stories and pics of Investigators on the water - and getting there.
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Geoff
Posts: 295
Joined: Tue Oct 29, 2019 12:04 pm
Investigator Boat Name: #50 Timeless
Location: Monto, Queensland

Re: sailing my investigator

Post by Geoff »

Same here Ozzie. I have even wondered about gas struts. But genuine standing room for the over six-footers would be the go.

Bill, looking forward to the pics.
Geoff
Investigator #50 'Timeless'
Investigator #111 'Missy'

As the engineer said, "sure it works in practice, but will it work in theory?"
no way
Posts: 188
Joined: Thu Jul 08, 2010 6:48 pm

Re: sailing my investigator

Post by no way »

The biggest issue I find with the top top mechanism is that it terribly clumsy - you gotta be an octopus to raise it. The Cole 23 mech is a dream. Spring loaded so you just push the tube up and hey presto.No lock pins and it rises vertically not backwards like ours. By changing the arm lengths you can make it go higher.
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cole23 poptop.jpg
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Ozzie
Posts: 1621
Joined: Wed May 27, 2009 1:07 pm
Investigator Boat Name: Spritzig II
Location: Lake Macquarie
Contact:

Re: sailing my investigator

Post by Ozzie »

Looks like a good system No Way.

I have not really made much use of the pop top and in fact I have removed the front struts as they interfere with my lockdown pad bolt. I’ve always considered it fairly rickety . I have not experimented but I consider a removable bracket that attached on the roof and then linked to the mast in some way would not only hold the front up but make it far more stable. Then I might add longer tubes to the rear for height similar to Emrys’ brilliant setup . I think I’d use Velcro on the inner edge of the pop top and attach canvas with clears hanging down and maybe clipped to ss studs on the flat surface near the edge of the opening. The male part of the stud would normally be hidden when the PT was down. Just a thought.


Edit...just throwing it out there , but I’ve also toyed with a thought of a low profile hard dodger . It’s hard to get standing headroom in the hatch without making it look ungainly unfortunately. Anyone else ever played with the idea💡
Not a lot of material involved
Not a lot of material involved
06A6512B-4796-4874-9A37-E468F9706CD6.jpeg (27.8 KiB) Viewed 4080 times
Ozzie
Investigator #143 "SPRITZIG II"

The Mariner - “It’s too strange here. It doesn’t move right." ...
Enola - “Helen said that it’s only land sickness."
Waterworld (1995)
Topaz Bill
Posts: 50
Joined: Sat Aug 01, 2020 2:19 pm
Investigator Boat Name: Secret Chord
Location: Topaz, FNQ

Re: sailing my investigator

Post by Topaz Bill »

Sorry Geoff, no photos yet, but my modification was really simple. I installed a couple of eyebolts one through the poptop and one through the cabin top at right angles to each other. They are joined by a bolt, and work perfectly.
The top can be raised instantly to about 45 degrees, so with the hatch slid forward, the boom preventer can stay coupled. I did install a latch to secure the top in case of a "mishap".
I hope this helps.
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Andrew
Posts: 541
Joined: Sun Aug 18, 2013 11:33 am
Investigator Boat Name: Teria
Location: Townsville, Qld
Contact:

Re: sailing my investigator

Post by Andrew »

G'day Topaz Bill,

Great to see another Investigator up North,

That's a good idea about a forward hinge on pop-top. my boat has nothing installed there at present (an old latch was broken) so been lashing it down for strong winds.
Andrew

Investigator #9 Teria
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