Organizer Ideas

These look like they were made for the C Dory by C Dory, I just need to figure out how to mount. I think glueing wood strips to the wall then screw into the weed strips. Thanks again.
 
If you ever want to complicate something call me, your thing that the tie wraps go thru sure are the way to go. The V berth is where I already have a net that goes down one complete side. The smaller ones I've never seen and they just rock, after 3 years I've just finished my boat for distant traveling on the east coast. I think everyone has heard our boats called Swiss Knives but I came up with what I think is a new one. I call my 16 cruiser a "Back Pack with a 50 hp". I had a mechinal accident last month, I was out in the boat positioning small containers on the pilot house walls, I left one of my dock lines tied to the rear cleat and let it sit in the splash well. All I did was idyl around and move the containers to get inspired, well the dock line blew out and wrapped around the prop. On idyl speed it managed to destroy the lower unit on my outboard. The new unit came in and we installed it and then went on to load my stainless prop as well but it wouldn't fit the core was too shallow for some reason. Well I had an aluminum spare so we loaded that and it was perfect, not only perfect but I gained 2K rpm. My engine now runs at the edge of red line and sounds great and I gained 4 mph. It was a poor assumption the previous owner had accurately selected the correct pitch angel on his stainless prop it was so shinny when it came back after having it recored when I spun it out last year on my 800 mile Savannah break in trip.
Its rare and cool when a failure has a Silver Lining, again thank you both for helping me find just one more item to improve my little cruiser.
 
I bought a lifetime supply in white for $5. One of the things I read and have found to be true is not putting any strain on them for at least 24 hours really improves the adhesion. Clean the surface with alcohol or acetone (if the surface can handle acetone, which the original hull interior can handle). Press the gizmo on. Press it again in a few hours. Press it again the next day. Then hang whatever on it. I've found the failure rate to be practically zero if I'm patient.

Mark
 
Oops. I forgot to post the link. I was talking about these. The are kind of an off white and match good.

http://www.amazon.com/Monoprice-Cable-m ... ge_o07_s00

They are self-adhesive with double backed foam tape. That's what I was talking about when pressing them on. No additional 4200 is needed. They can be removed and the area cleaned up with some kind of a goo-be-gone product.

Here they are holding the wiring going to my bilge pump.

102_0129.sized.jpg

Mark
 
Don't know the weight figure, but if your attachment is good, these pads sometimes fail because the foam adhesive pad pulls apart (leaving half on the plastic holder and half on whatever surface it was bonded to). Also eventually the foam pad will degrade and come apart. Depends on the usage environment. If I want the mounts to be there a really long time, I remove the foam and glue the mount directly to the surface.
 
Probably not 10# each, or at least not for long. A pound or a little more is probably max, so they're great for running wiring, which is their intended purpose. I have used them on painted areas and it is the paint that has pulled loose as the weakest link. I've been using double-backed foam tape for a few non-crucial things and, if you're not asking too much, it seems to work great. Even if I assume that it might fail in a few years, it is still so much nicer than drilling holes in everything. I just attached a solar controller directly to the hull today with DB tape.

101_0709.jpg

Mark
 
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