Jump to content

Which buoy product will last FOREVER always under water ?


swbca
 Share

Recommended Posts

  • Baller_

On a new submersible course we just installed through the ice, we need something equivalent to a couple of 9" skier balls that will always be underwater and well be subject to daily 1 atmosphere compression/expansion cycles. Is there a particular skier or gate marker product that wouldn't decay and sink after several years ? Don't need or want a fixed volume float - reduced buoyancy at depth is good in this case.

 

From experience, is there a Brand of Skier or inflatable Gate markers that are most durable ?

 

Its the blue float added to the original design - it ensures there is no residual tension from the winch-line on skier or gate buoys when the course is "up"

rmz039o7ds84.png

 

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Baller_
@PatM Sounds good, but we prefer something that will compress at depth and then rebound. I have a friend who used foam Crab-Trap buoys for boat guides. the looked great but after they were sunk 40 feet every day, they crinkled up and didn't rebound after a while. A standard 9" slalom ball would be fine but I don't know if they deteriorate after several years.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Baller_

Try a Wally Buoy. They use about half the air of a normal turn ball. I’d recommend that you use them as your turn balls as well. They are very durable and hold up very well to UV exposure. They are more expensive than the other buoys.

 

https://shop.wallyskier.com/Buoys-Dont-over-inflate-and-use-petroleum-jelly-on-the-needle_c8.htm

Lpskier

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Baller_

@lpskier The boat guides look good. Need their additional volume for buoyancy compared to the wallyskier skier balls for the winch extraction assist. (in the drawing above)

 

The turn balls would be good for the course. They would cut the total buoyancy of the course down so the tension from winch to the course would be less, resulting in less stretch in the 700 feet of poly roap between the winch and the course = less winding.

 

Good Recommendation . . . thanks

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Members

For a couple of decades, before we finally built a boathouse w/lift, we used a red mooring buoy as part of a system that allowed us to moor our ski boat several yards from our dock, padlocked to a stainless chain that led back to a locked connection to the dock itself. The mooring buoy remained underwater year round for it's entire life there.

 

After building the boathouse we passed the mooring buoy on to a friend on a different lake who uses it to suspend a submersible well his lake. All told, that mooring buoy has spent 100% of its life (almost 30 years) entirely submerged. Depths have varied from a few feet to more than 12 feet under the surface.

 

"Taylor Made Tuff End" is the make/model; they are very recognizable by their red color with navy-blue heavy-duty eyelet:

 

53xi738zs70e.jpg

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Baller_

RGilmore The Taylor Made Tuff End comes in several sizes so I could use a single float. For exampe the15" buoy has 62lbs of buoyancy - I will probably have to test with some temporary floats to see what I need. Probably start with 9" skier balls that I have to see how many of those it takes to the the job . . then go permanent with a better quality float.

Thanks

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Baller_
@BraceMaker a very attractive and inventive idea but it would require maintenance. If its not a closed system, the air very slowly gets absorbed into the water so there is something similar to a very slow leak of air. I did something like that in a previous course. Every couple of years I would dive down and blow some air into the holes forcing some of the water out. Maybe again . . its a "tunable" solution.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Baller_
We have foam buoys on our courses as "subs" but they have been under water for 5+ years now...and Im 100% if I drive to our lake and dive down they will be the same as the day they were installed, just will have a bit of algae on them! (they sit at 15-25 Feet Down depending on where on the lake, and which course ( 6 ball / and two 4 ball courses )

Performance Ski and Surf 

Mike@perfski.com

👾

 

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Baller_
@mike_mapple We Need something that compresses with depth to reduce buoyancy. So a good quality buoy or group of buoys is best. We are pulling the float down 32 feet which is one atmosphere cutting the buoy's volume by 50%, provided its initial pressure was equal to 1 atmosphere plus the water pressure at the top position . . . the buoy is flaccid at the top . . not tight and not collapsed. Styrofoam will not lose buoyancy at depth.
Link to comment
Share on other sites

Create an account or sign in to comment

You need to be a member in order to leave a comment

Create an account

Sign up for a new account in our community. It's easy!

Register a new account

Sign in

Already have an account? Sign in here.

Sign In Now
 Share

×
×
  • Create New...