dkircher wrote:Kevin,
Thanks for your valuable advice. I would have spent a lot of time trying to figure out where to fish the wires without it. I agree that having the VHF at eye level (and ear level) is a real advantage. I'll bet I'm not the only Albin owner having trouble hearing the low-mounted radio with that diesel engine roaring away. The Admiral suggested headphones to listen to the radio. I nixed that.
Hey Dave,
I agree with Kevin that overhead is a great place to mount the radio.
What I wasn't prepared for was the effort to get it there! I assumed (always a mistake) that the corner of the headliner in the pilot house was a big open chase, that I could easily get wires through. And on a modern radio there can be a bunch of wires! (Hailer horn, extension speaker, GPS connection, antenna, and in my case remote mike (Icom 504 w/ rear mounted mic) AND a Command mic!)
No problem, plenty of room...
Wrong!
It turns out there is a piece of ~1" pvc pipe up in that space to act as a chase. Already smaller than what I thought was there but big enough. What caused this simple operation to end up taking a friend and I a full day to finish was the big chunk of epoxy that was blocking the forward end. Someone at the Albin factory got a bit carried away with the gun! There was NO room. (How I know this for a fact is below.) I spent hours trying to get a snake around the corner (I was working through the starboard wiper wire access) and down to the aft side pannel. Then when I finally got one there I couldn't get my connectors through.
So what does one do now?
Give up?
Maybe if I owned a lesser boat, but I'm an Albin owner, damnit!
So out comes the hole saw. My buddy and I went back and forth on where to drill and finally decided on the forward pannel, about an inch from the corner. Opened up a 2" hole, took a peek, and voila! Pink epoxy goop! And we can see the chase! So we clean it out (screw driver and hammer are my friends!) and finish the job in 30 minutes. I popped in a round cover from Home Depot, hole closed, job done.
I tell you all this hoping that "Mister Epoxy" didn't work on your boat, but, if he did, just be prepared. Once I knew where to look/feel I was able to find the aft end of the chase and if it hadn't been blocked this would have gone smoothly without the hole.
I'll look for a photo showing the spot.
And would I do this again? In a heartbeat! Having the radio up high makes it easier to hear and use. I happen to like having the remote mic, but a regular radio would be fine as well, and I have the command mic in the cabin, near the stereo, so I can easily listen in to radio traffic or weather while hunkered down.
Any questions just let me know.