Saturday, December 12, 2009
Over to Granville Island for the finishing touches
Sunday, August 23, 2009
Old School "Made in the USA" Ford 427
Thursday, August 20, 2009
The Crew Cruise - a salute to those still standing
Dr Doug, resplendent in his polyester sky blue shirt matching the Vancouver evenings sky to perfection, was the principle architect and the critical eye. Doug only does what Doug does well. A one-man-band in a very quiet way. His experience and knowledge base are second to none.
That is just AWESOME May 26 2009
Eric
Very excellent job on everything including the detail down to the red safety tips on the hose clamps. Beautiful boat and workmanship on everything. Motor issues aside, you should be good and ready for summer Pac Northwest style as we say here in the lower 48. I don't think I ever saw any better wiring job under the hood of a BMW.
JB
Jimmy tested and rejected the starboard engine twice before it was cleared on the third run. Problems identified in the starboard engine were double checked on the port engine, any similar problems were corrected before the port was given room on the bench.
Without his expertise, we would have been back at square one (stuck on the dock) for the second time. He picked up incorrect sized valve springs, reverted the side oiler back to a side oiler after the shop "modified" it and found a leak in the exhaust manifold that was letting water into the block.
Gord (right) - the man with the long reach - he changed his schedule dozens of times to accommodate the engines being returned and lifted back into the boat. The man that makes a very difficult operation go smooth as silk. Gord's dexterity with his crane boom is surreal.
Saturday, August 8, 2009
The first week aboard the "New Paramount"
Departed Scott Point Aug 6 at 1700hrs through Navy Channel and Plomper Sound arriving Lyall Harbour Saturna island at 1800 hrs.
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Had a great dinner and overnight ashore with our friends Al and Lianne Peretz, and departed the next day Aug 7 at 1200hrs , but not before draining the local fuel dock dry of gasoline ( at $1.38 @ L !!! ) - for our journey home through Trincomali Channel, Poirier Pass ( with a 6 knot flow speeding us along ) - arriving False Creek Yacht Club, 1730 hrs with a 10 knot winds and following seas.
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With the weather getting much cooler we were all ready to get back to the house after a wonderfull first week aboard the new Paramount !
Estimate fuel consumption closer to 50 percent better ...
rodl (rolling on dock laughing) over zach and the pee still ....
Pictures to come...
Sunday, August 2, 2009
Paramount's first trip with the Precious cargo
Saturday 1st August 2009
Miss P leaves the dock at 14:00 hours with Mrs T, Ali, Gab and Zach onboard for the long awaited summer holiday cruise to the Gulf Islands. Arriving at 0000.
Engine Hours:
Flawless cruise to salt spring - amazing !!!
Except for zach getting stung by man-o-war and our whole crew having to pee on him .....too funny ....
2800 rpm - was good speed ...
10 knots with whaler in tow - fuel consumption wayyyyyy down - at least 30 percent better ....
Tides:
09:29 1.1 3.6
17:22 4.2 13.8
Salt Spring Island
One of the most beautiful islands in the Southern Gulf. The Saturday Market is an amazing collection of local organic growers, bakers, cheese makers and other towns folks who sell handmade furniture, and other artistic wears. The colours and displays are beautiful. The quality and the taste - gourmet by any standards. It is a place that reminds us of simpler times, when the market wasn't global.
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Saturday, August 1, 2009
Engines Rebuilt (again)
What went wrong with the first pair;
11-1 compression Keith Black Hypereutectic Pistons, a side-oiler "converted" to a top oiler, shabby rebuilt Holley carburetors, shabby rebuilt distributors, wrong sized valve springs. What am I forgetting?
The pistons were shipped as part of a "Deluxe Rebuild Kit" from Performance Suspension Technology. They sent pistons that would be right for a hot-rod racing machine, but totally wrong for a marine installation. It wasn't picked up by the machinist.
The carbs and distributors went out to local shops for rebuilds. The carbs looked like they hadn't be touched. The distributors couldn't have been.
For round two, the pistons were changed to forged KB dished with a compression rating of 9.1-1, a thicker gasket was used for the heads reducing compression further. The carbs went to a shop in Southern California and came back looking like they were new out of the box. The distributors have been sent to another So-Cal outfit and a spare pair are being used in the short term.
The proper bearings and cam were flown in for the side-oiler. Which was purchased for parts and rebuilt first as the machine shop waited for the engines out of the boat. The engines in Paramount were top-oilers and this was also missed until the spare engine was rebuilt. When they started on the other engine they realized there were two different engine builds.
Jimmy Richmond, Richmond Engines and his right-hand Aaron were responsible for the dyno testing this round. There help was invaluable. They found the springs to be incorrect on the valves. They picked up condensation "like H2O" said Aaron in the oil filter after running the engine they cut the filter in half to check it. Thorough to say the least!
By the time they signed off one engine had to be dyno tested three times, whilst the other was run twice. Their diligent efforts saved us from another catastrophe.
Here is some film looking over the transom at the wake and exhaust of Paramount.
Saturday, July 18, 2009
Canadian Pacific Flagship
Friday, April 24, 2009
Back to the Island
Tuesday, April 21, 2009
Comment From Paul, Founder of The Chris Craft Commander Forum
Paul has commented on this blog site - he must have found it on his own. We had been waiting to write to his website after everything was finished on Miss P.
He has beat us to it, and comments on our engine problems. He is THE MAN - when it comes to Chris Craft Commanders, he is the founder of the CCC Forum, an architect by trade, a Chris fanatic by admission. We are grateful for his website and value his comments on our situation immensely. This is what he has written:
"Man I am soooo sad to hear news like this, especially after you have put your heart and soul into the restoration. I note the use of Keith Black pistons, many people have used these as a basis for custom 427 pistons with good results.
The only things I can imagine that would cause the motor to heat up like that would be poor ignition/fuel mix, a very poor automotive timing setting (and not following the dimple on the flywheel at 500-RPM while in gear for the marine Chris Craft setting), or a leaned out fuel mix (or both simultaneously), or perhaps an impeller that went out causing a catastrophic over-heating of the motor while running at speed.
Forensic review of the impeller and strainer, and coolant would give an indication of their integrity.
This could have been caused by advanced ignition timing, wrong plugs, lean fuel, intake manifold vacuum leak, sticking valves (perhaps incorrectly set for a solid lifter motor), insufficient cooling, poor lubrication.
I have considerable resources I can share with you if you need them on the 427 marine motor. Drop me a line at ChrisCraftCommander@hotmail.com
and I'll do whatever I can to assist.
Sincerely,
Paul
Thursday, April 16, 2009
Melt Down!
Sunday, April 12, 2009
"I still don't want bowling shoes ..."
After months of labour & tons of TLC everything is restored to as new - all systems have been upgraded, the engines bench tested - Miss P is a looking and feeling like a new boat and she's ready to go for a first burn.
A fine moment - the Captain at the wheel, feeling the difference in power and response. His beautiful boat is running like new.