shoe horning the composter
Begun actual fitting of litlgull's Airhead.
Since purchase of the unit it has become an antique.
There is a new Airhead with upgrade connectors of the two main pieces -
and a choice now of household sized seat or the original marine seat.
The bowl hole size under the seat - TEN INCH diameter- has not changed.
The seat inside diameter is a slightly out of round NINE INCHES.
Comtemporary real household seats have roughly the same width hole but often oval forward to a 15" opening
The complete AirHead seat dimensions are about 13 inches round
and including the fairly stiff foam gasket on the bottom of the seat (the lid has a gasket as well of the same material) the whole affair is TWO INCHES TALL.
It is also rather heavy at about four pounds and seems to be composed of whatever old-fashioned household toilet seats were made out of - some kind of compressed wood maybe? But it is a BEMIS unit and nicely designed. It's what you accept as highend proper seating for any toilet. In this case, it's barely adequate for a midget, imco.
Geoff Trott who introduces himself on the phone as the Airhead designer has done some important upgrades, including the ' household' version of the seat. Still very small in the pics on the Airhead site but a bit elongated. Actual household seats are longer, not necessarily wider in the hole, but wider in the seating frame and more friendly.
Somewhere I read (was it here?) that the Nature's Way composter came about when some former workers at Airhead who made upgrade suggestions for the Airhead were ignored.
So they began their own company. Haven't seen the composter yet - haven't sat on it - but it looks pretty small in the seat also, but larger and more innovative than the original Airhead.
The seat is molded into bowl with a hinged lid that cups the seat so that it adds little to its height.
This is to say, then, that the Nature's Way toilet can not be shortened much at all by altering the seat arrangement. (Nature'sWay is also an inch taller overall than the AirHead.)
But the original Airhead has TWO INCHES to play with. If you are going to have seat and lid obviously you won't get a two inch downsize in the composter's height. Gonna need something to sit on.
I lowered the deck in the V-berth to make sure the Airhead would fit under any aisle covering needed to convert the area into bunking. Trying out the Airhead AFTER the remodel, I discovered I hadn't lowered the deck enough!!! Jimminy Cricket!
Taking the seat/lid unit off and thinking that something thinner like plywood could be used, I'm trying a number of possibilities, including thinner gasketing.
One of the things that could be suggested to the Airhead designer is a less schmaltzy seat unit molded out of polyethylene to get at least a ONE INCH reduction in height - and still have a seat that would appeal to gentler bottoms. Given that employees left to right wrongs with a whole new company, that's not going to happen, Tho maybe there is a ready made in a Bemis toilet seat catalog.
Two other things:
There are twin airvent holes for the hose too far toward the side of the bowl. With the composter pushed up into the V-berth aisle, it is not possible to access the either hole with the hose. A new 1 3/4" hole has to be drilled further around toward the back of the bowl. I'm going to check with Geoffry on this and also ask him about plugging in the original holes. There was no mention of plugging the extra hole, it was left open when I got the toilet.
Maybe it was left open on purpose. Be easy enough to close holes in the bowl with poprivets.
CRAIG,
have you come up with an idea and photos we can see of your INTERIOR DORADE? It's the ONLY solution! But where you put it is a problem, imco. For me, given the open interior design I committed to, an obvious lump in the rise of the cabin side is a problem and head-banger.
For starters imagine a shoe box attached to the cabin inside, either in front of or behind the little opening port. I "see" it on the starboard side.
'WHAT'S THAT HOSE THING YOU GOT HANGING FROM THE ROOF IN THE FRONT CABIN?'
The Airhead came with a tiny square box fan and a scupper-like plastic fitting that the fan can be squeezed into.
One end reduces to hose size, the other has a substantial flange that normally would be used to attach the fitting overhead to a cowl or Nicro piepan vent.
But it could attach instead to the shoebox in a low position on the forward side of the shoebox. The hose could be partial hidden.
The dorade has a baffle down the middle inside that rises 3/4s of the way to the top where there is enough space to allow the fan air to turn down a small distance to the exit hole in the cabin side - with the clamshell, ON DECK you'd see the chromed clamshell about half way up the side of the cabin either just in front of or just behind the opening port.
Drill scupper holes thru the bottom of the side with the exit hole to let any spray water back out. Don't know if the fan is strong enough for all this distance and friction?
What do you think?
Another problem when pushing the compoiser forward in the V-berth is that you soon run out of cranking space for the tumbler.
I thought of everything complicated, including a 5" diameter wheel with a folding revolving handle. Not enough room!
On the Airhead site Geoff has a better solution. Simply use a rachet wrench with a 3/8" adapter - that fits into the same hole as the crank - for the handle, Perfect for close quarters there. Of course they cost $35 or more.
Smaller problems: the opening lever on the right side of the bowl is really close to my Viberth side. It has to be moved down and up one-quarter circle to open and close the pee sluice.
Another problem is with the screw-in holding knobs for the composter on the side of the container. On the Airhead we have to screw the small knobs into smaller inserts. Has to be done 'blind' as it will very difficult to get visual accuracy and fingers in there.
Thanks for considering this!!