Unpacking in Aussie (12 photos)

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Phillip
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Location: Sunshine Coast Australia 2000 26X Tohatsu 50hp

Unpacking in Aussie (12 photos)

Post by Phillip »

I apologise if there are too many photos below. Felt some may have found an interest in them, or a possible source for future reference, for themselves or for their Shipping Agents.

I have personally not seen the boat yet. Photos taken by Shipping agent as they took the boat out of the container here in Aussie-land. He tells me it is a "great boat" and in great condition. (apparantly him and all his office staff have all been down to check it out).

Quarantine Officers go over it tomorrow, and when that is cleared (hope it passes easily) then Customs do their bit. He tells me there is no need to go down. He will arrange a tilt tray and have it delivered to my door. Only damage he can find is torn wrapping plastic, which they did when they took it out.

There you go. Up to this point, no drama at all, just a matter of 'Bucks'.
Mind you that bloke Murphy has been known to visit this household regularly, so am anticipating an unexpected 'problem' soon......it has gone too well so far. Hope some of you find this knowledge of value and worth tucking away.
Cheers
Phillip

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Craig LaForce
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Post by Craig LaForce »

THanks for posting the photos, questions about shipping pop up every once in a while. Who was the shipping company? did they handle the loading and unloading? Who removed the trailer axle (and replaced) any other details would be helpful to others.

THanks
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jasper
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Post by jasper »

Wow, was that ever a tight fit. The inside dimensions must be pretty close to 8ft width to allow the Mac to squeeze in. Is that a 30ft container?
A friend who formerly was Chief Mate on a 650 ft Canadian container ship called the MV Sanderling told me that they have a very low percentage of damage to itmes in the containers. The biggest concern is heavy seas washing containers off the ship.
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RobertKing
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Post by RobertKing »

The biggest concern is heavy seas washing containers off the ship.
I use to write code for a refer company. The containers washing off the ship in weather happens quite a lot. Plus they float and become a hazzard to navigation. Its standard procedure to call the nearest navy with a sub close to sink them. So quite naturally we tried to embedded torpedo avoidence code in our firmware.
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Captain Steve
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Post by Captain Steve »

I assume the trailer was under it for the forklift usage?
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nchogberg
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Post by nchogberg »

Congrats,

Look forward to seeing pics of your adventures.

later...
Hawg
AWKIII
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Post by AWKIII »

Hi Phillip.

Glad to see she made it to Oz!

Cheers!
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Scott
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Post by Scott »

Heck no, not too many pics phillip. Thats awesome. Keep em comeing.
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beene
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Post by beene »

Must have been quite a relief to see her come out of the box in one piece, no damage :|

Did you have your fingers crossed as you watched her come out?

I would have. :wink:

Congrats on the new boat :)

G
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Shane
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Post by Shane »

Congrats Phillip!!!

It will feel great once your out on it on the water... it will be all worth it!

Regards,
Shane
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Lease
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Post by Lease »

Congratulations Phillip.

Is Leigh using the same company? Sounds like it was a neat operation over all.

If you hurry, you can make it to Marlay Point in time for the overnight race. Only take you a couple of days to get there :wink:
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Night Sailor
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Post by Night Sailor »

Even stripped down and in wrappings, an X is a beautiful machine. Congratulations Phillip and many happy sails to you and yours.
Phillip
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Location: Sunshine Coast Australia 2000 26X Tohatsu 50hp

Post by Phillip »

Here are some answers to questions.
it was a 40' container.
shipper says there was about half-an-inch tolerance each side:
I went thru Sea-Go International (Peter Toombling) here in Brisbane.
When i showed him Richard Waltons (off this site) photos of his in a container, everything was 'go'. he in turn used CFR in Longbeach CA. The lady there didn't open the e-mail with the photos so there were weeks of mucking around...broker measuring and re-measuring. When she saw the photos, "oh, we ship those all the time for the factory down there" (being MacGregor).
CFR removed axels etc, and did the complete load. Sea-Go wil do the same here. That is one trap in getting quotes. Some quote for shipping etc only, then you get a 'big extra' for loading/unloading.
The trailer frame was under it at all times.
I havn't seen it as yet. Won't do until it is delivered.

As for Leigh. He is following the exact track as me, same shipper...everything. Have suggested he put up photos as don't want to steal any of his glory. Com'on Leigh!!!!!

Cheers
Phillip
Phillip
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Joined: Fri Nov 26, 2004 11:49 pm
Location: Sunshine Coast Australia 2000 26X Tohatsu 50hp

Post by Phillip »

update:
Had a call from my Shipper here.
Quarantine Inspectors have been over the boat and found 'timber componatory' in it (which i knew) and require it to be funigated.
They want to use methyl bromide.
They seal the whole thing in a sort of tent, and apply the chemical by probably a bomb inside.
Shipper tells me some people object to this, which is over come with a detailed analysist of timber type/where from/ internal condition etc etc. Apparantly an expensive exercise.
I don't use methyl bromide here in my business so have no experience.
Does anyone have any experience in this area.
I am considering (when it arrive home)just putting my workers on to cleaning the boat with soapy water (including all wiring...everything). I have spray suits/chemical masks/gloves here if they are needed.
Can't see it as being a big issue but:
so if anyone has any suggestions/ideas/experience then please let me know.[/u]
Cheers
Phillip
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kmclemore
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Post by kmclemore »

Well, here's the MSDS - that's some pretty nasty stuff. It also kills the ozone layer, for all you tree-huggers out there.

Here's a safety sheet from Australia - methyl bromide was supposed to be phased out in 2005, although it seems it's still exempt for quarrantine situations such as yours.

There won't be much need for cleanup, however:
Exposure to soil residues after fumigation is unlikely to cause health effects as methyl bromide quickly evaporates at normal temperatures....
... And from another site:
Methyl bromide is a colorless gas at room temperature and a liquid below 38.5ºF (3.6ºC) or when compressed. It is usually shipped as a liquefied, compressed gas. It is odorless and nonirritating at low concentrations and has a musty or fruity odor at high concentrations (greater than 1,000 ppm). Because methyl bromide lacks adequate physiologic warning properties, up to 2% chloropicrin, a lacrimator, is often added to prevent significant exposure.

Most exposures occur by inhalation and by absorption through the skin. Odor is not an adequate indicator of the presence of pure methyl bromide and does not provide reliable warning of hazardous concentrations. Because pure methyl bromide lacks adequate warning properties, significant exposure can occur before symptoms are evident.

Methyl bromide is 3 times heavier than air and can accumulate in poorly ventilated or low-lying areas. Under adverse conditions, it can remain in the air for days after application as a fumigant. Fatalities have occurred among pesticide appliers and building occupants who were exposed during the application process or who prematurely reentered fumigated buildings.

Methyl bromide reacts with strong oxidizers, magnesium, aluminum, tin, zinc, and alloys. It attacks aluminum to form aluminum trimethyl, which is spontaneously flammable.
Given that it settles in low-lying areas, I'd recommed that you very thoroughly ventilate the boat for several days, with fans or other such devices. You might put a long vacuum hose down in the bilges and have the vacuum above decks so you can suck out any remaining gas.

Washing down won't do much good, since the stuff evaoprates at around 39º F (4º C).
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