[PUP] sad news -- Passage of Time destroyed in fire

Alan Wagner Wagner.Florida at verizon.net
Sat Apr 19 17:40:13 EDT 2008


Many of you have followed my design and construction of "Passage of Time," a
53' aluminum passagemaker Debbie and I dreamed up a few years ago and then
had Michael Kasten design for us.  This sight has been invaluable to our
search for the perfect boat and the many design decisions and choices that
must be made along the way.  We actually found the builder via the related
BST site and, of course, as we started building, we engaged T&T's very own
Arild Jensen to tweak our electrical design into a really cool set up for us


"Passage of Time" was set to launch and "hit the water" in late summer.  The
final welding was nearly complete; the carpenters and electricians were busy
at work, systems were on the way . . . .

On Monday disaster struck.

In what appears to be an incredible freak accident with a welding spark
bouncing off something, through a port hole, and into a small garbage bag
that had some trash insulation -- that immediately roared into a fire that
could not be contained -- "Passage of Time" was destroyed.  By the time that
the extinguisher was retrieved from the pilothouse, the smoke and flames
were too much to handle.  The fresh unfinished cherry wood caught on fire,
and that was all she wrote.  I will get pictures sooner or later, but it
will not look pretty.  The superstructure melted from the heat and isn't
there.  A portion of the deck itself melted away and/or collapsed into the
interior of the boat.  Apparently the cherry wood Debbie so loved burns
rather hot.

The fire marshal is testing the insulation to see if it conforms to the fire
retardant product described on the MSDS that was provided to the builder.
The foam apparently went up in flame very very quickly, even though painted
with fire retardant paint.

The boat is a total loss.

The insurance people are doing what they do best, crawling all over the
place, testing and surveying everything in sight.  The builder -- with whom
I have the utmost confidence and trust -- was as saddened as Debbie and I
were.  It was bad enough for us to hear about it, they had to watch it burn.
 It was terrible to think of our "baby" literally going up in smoke.
Thankfully, no one was hurt and we are most grateful for that.  We have come
to know and befriend the builders, welders, carpenters and the collective
group of people who, over the last 17 months, turned sheets of metal, wood,
and wire into the beautiful boat with which we were looking forward to
cruising to places frequently dreamed of.

We were really looking forward to our expected August or September launch.
Looks like that will be postponed a bit, as we must start over from frame
one!  The rebuild will probably go a little faster since the builders and
crew "know" the boat now and, as a little silver lining, the rebuild will
allow us to tweak a few areas that we believe can be improved having seen
the "real thing" as opposed to a 2-D plan.

Bummer. Time for a drink! Perhaps three.

Thank goodness I had not yet found a buyer for our current boat . . . . .


Alan Wagner
Tampa, Florida
"Morning Delight"  1978, 44' Gulfstar MC
Building "Passage of Time" -- Kasten designed 53' aluminum passagemaker
http://kastenmarine.com/valdemar52.htm
o;?


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