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Summer Edition
Welcome
 
Welcome to our Summer Edition of the Marina Connect Newsletter.  2018 was a big year with the resurfacing of decking at Slip Bight and storm damage to Metung. The positive side is that both the marina structures will be improved - stronger and longer lasting. Thank you for your patience with the repairs to the Metung Marina, insurance claims often delay the timing of actioning the repair plan.
Please welcome Chloe to our team.  She will be helping out with administration tasks including this newsletter whilst Tess is on maternity leave. 
On that subject, congratulations to Tess and family on the arrival of another son.

Please stay safe out there enjoying the beauty that is the Gippsland Lakes and let’s hope for great weather throughout the summer.
 
We wish you all the best for the festive season and look forward to another successful year ahead.
Annual Berth Holder Meetings
Round up of Annual Berth Holder meetings held 20th October 2018
 
Berth holder meetings were held at Metung and Paynesville on Saturday 20 October 2018. Both had positive attendance and participation. Notes of the items discussed as well as the Presentation Slides will be available on Council website.
After a wild storm on 12 May 2018, the floating jetty sustained significant damage. 
Council engaged CrossCo and Cross Diving to inspect the damage and provide a report on the repairs required.  This information was provided to the original constructor, some local contractors capable of repairing the marina and a non-local contractor sourced by the insurer to provide quotes to repair the Marina. 

Council’s insurer reviewed the quotes and have engaged the services of Jarvis Norwood to repair the marina.  They have been working with Superior Jetties to manufacture new pontoons and supply the materials required. The first of the shipments of materials arrived 2 weeks later than expected with the other delayed until January.  Thankfully, Jarvis Norwood received the materials required to repair  the main walkway which was repaired in time for peak period with the damaged and missing fingers to be repaired early February 2019.

Council will also be making some improvements to ensure this type of incident doesn’t happen again.  Stern piles will be installed between double pens as soon as possible to allow vessels to tie up on and use to guide them into the berth rather than putting that pressure on the fingers.  The piles have been ordered and will be installed in the new year. 

Council will also be seeking a concept and design for the hard stand jetty to provide wave attenuation as well as the benefit of more area to park vessels being launched and retrieved via crane. 
The third improvement will be in sourcing underwater wave attenuation for the southern end of the floating jetty.

Some concerns have been raised regarding some of the steps and other modifications installed on the marina structures to assist berth holders accessing their vessels.  As per the Marina Berth Holder Agreement Condition 12. ‘The berth holder must not alter or modify the Berth, or attach any fixtures, fittings or equipment to the Berth or Marina, without the written permission of the Shire.’ 
A check of Council records found no written permission or request for any of the existing modifications.  This may mean they were installed by previous berth owners, may have been installed without permission or written permission was not uploaded or was, but referenced incorrectly.  To rectify this, all berth holders with modifications will be asked if they wish to retain the modification.  Those who no longer require the modification, the equipment will be removed. Those who do wish to keep the equipment will be required to notify Council in writing and accept responsibility for maintaining the equipment and removing it in the event they relinquish the berth.  Berth holders with unsafe modifications will be notified and are required to rectify or remove the equipment.  Examples of unsafe modifications are those with excessive corrosion, star-picket type handle and those relying on toe capping to support the equipment.
                   
With the refurbishment of decking at Slip Bight, modifications should be located on the finger jetty, not to the main walkway – only exception will be berths without a finger jetty.

 Slip Bight Marina Refurbishment

We are half-way there!
Jetty 4 has now been resurfaced removing the old timber decking boards and toe-capping and replaced them with marina mesh and composite toe-capping. Jetty 1 is scheduled for around April/May next year and Jetty 2 is scheduled for Aug/Sept next year. 
Our internal Works Crew have done a great job with the first two jetties however their works calendar is quite full and we will need to source contractors to carry out the remaining construction works. 
We will still order the materials in-house to ensure consistency of the materials and our works crew have provided instructions of how to carry out the works.
 

        

How batteries can explode - and how to avoid it

 

During the final stages of charging, all lead-acid batteries break down some of the electrolyte in a battery into hydrogen and oxygen. With sealed batteries, such as gel cells and AGMs, the gases are normally contained within the battery, although in certain circumstances (notably, persistent overcharging), enough internal pressure can build up to open pressure release valves and vent the gasses.

With wet cell batteries – the type that need topping up from time to time – the gases are always vented.
Hydrogen, which is highly explosive, is much lighter than air, so typically will rapidly rise and disperse, so long as there is even minimal venting from the top of a battery box and from the top of the compartment in which the battery box is housed.
However, if a pocket of gas forms, any spark (such as from a brushed electric motor kicking on) may set off the hydrogen, on occasion resulting in a powerful explosion. This is what blew the top off the Fukushima nuclear power plants in Japan. 

Occasionally, internal short circuits create a spark inside batteries that can set off a hydrogen explosion within the battery, blowing the case open. Note that this can occur with sealed batteries as well as with wet cell batteries.
There is far more electrical kit on modern cruising boats than there was in the past. Batteries are worked harder than ever before, with a greater likelihood of hydrogen emissions, especially when powerful charging devices are in use, with charging voltages pushed to the limits that batteries can tolerate. Most cheap automotive chargers (such as the one in use on Thursday's Child at the time of the explosion) have poor voltage regulation, increasing the risk of overcharging and substantial hydrogen generation. But even with expensive, tightly-controlled chargers, batteries are sometimes deliberately pushed to a vigorous ‘gassing’ stage, notably when ‘equalising’ or ‘conditioning’ wet-cell batteries.

When batteries are worked hard, they generate a fair amount of internal heat. This increases a battery’s ability to absorb charging current without its voltage rising, which effectively disables any voltage regulator on the charging device, resulting in gross overcharging. The battery can get into a condition known as ‘thermal runaway’ in which it soaks up all the charging current that can be thrown at it, converting this into hydrogen, oxygen and heat – a dangerously potent mix.
The only effective way to guard against this is to have temperature sensing at the battery, linked to the charging device. However, temperature sensors don’t work when they are stuck to the top of a battery, which is where I normally see them, as there is an insulating pocket of air inside the battery.

Sensors need to be fastened directly to the battery posts, or else taped to the side of a battery about half way down. They are an essential piece of the charging system for any batteries that will be worked hard. Automotive chargers typically do not have a temperature sensor. Even with vigorous hydrogen formation, so long as a battery compartment is vented from the top, allowing the hydrogen to escape, hydrogen will almost always be safely vented from the boat. But if a pocket builds up and there is any kind of a spark, either inside or outside the battery, the consequences can be devastating.

Nigel Calder is YM’s technical guru and author of the esteemed Boat Owner’s Mechanical and Electrical Manual (Adlard Coles).

Read more at https://www.yachtingmonthly.com/archive/how-batteries-can-explode-and-how-to-avoid-it-3930#erLYLvwfla4WcRdk.99
 

 Council Marina Power Policy Procedure

Emails (with rules and regulations) will be sent to all berth holders regarding the policing of Power Policy to commence Feb 2019 – if you will be unable to comply by 1/02/19, please forward your request for extension to Commercial Business Coordinator to avoid breach of Rules and Regulations letter.

 Recent Strong Winds

Recent strong winds have resulted in a few broken mooring lines.
Please remember to regularly check and replace mooring lines as the salt water and UV rays will cause them to deteriorate. 
Weakened lines can break under force without showing any visible signs of deterioration.

Rope is much cheaper than your insurance excess fees!

Annual Invoices
Annual invoices have been forwarded – please arrange payment, and return of signed agreements with updated copies of your vessel’s insurance and registration.
Council’s Simone Spykers was tasked to get some drone footage for our internal imagery database of Council assets which we could also use in future marketing projects. 

She captured some amazing photos of Slip Bight Marina and Chinaman’s Creek Marina and will be back to do Metung Marina when all the repairs are completed.
Do you have any tips for special spots or great photos of our beautiful lakes?  Send them in to councilmarinas@egipps.vic.gov.au – the best ones received each quarter will be highlighted in our Newsletter.
 
Reminder
Vessels in Council Marinas are not to be rented out as accommodation on sites such as Air BNB, etc. as this would be a breach of the Rules and Regulations that could lead to eviction from the Marina.
Events in East Gippsland
 
Don't forget to keep an eye out for upcoming events and things to do in the region on the East Gippsland Shire Council's tourism website
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