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The advice given on this site is based upon individual or quoted experience, yours may differ.
The Officers, Staff and members of this site only provide information based upon the concept that anyone utilizing this information does so at their own risk and holds harmless all contributors to this site.
Does anyone know a system for lowering the dinette table on a 250 so that it drops down flush with the settees and creates a larger V-Birth.
I seems that the system was built to remove the table and store the table below the the v-birth (kind of a pain.) Most camp-trailers I've been in are built so the table simply drops down and the seat pads slide over it to create a bed.
This doesn't seem to be the case though. There is a through bolt into the mast support pole with a lock nut that would seem to lower the whole table but this is not a quick task.
Any advice, products or systems out there would be much appreciated.
Thanks,
Jared
Jared Cruce 1997 250WK "Inspiration" #299 Honda 9.9 Ashland, OR
I think your vintage of C250 has a table mechanism that was replaced during the next model year. It's not particularly strong (at least on the boats that I saw with that mechanism), and if you could arrange to lower the table, it would be unlikely to hold up well with people on it.
In order to make a drop-down berth, you'd probably need to cut a new table that's a perfect fit to the settees, add firring strips near the tops of the settees to help support the weight, and install the stronger pedestal mount that the C250 has had since 1998 (plus make custom cushions, and find a place to store them). You could then purchase or make two pedestal tubes - one for normal table height, and a shorter one for bed height.
I know that at least one person has built a table to enlarge the sleeping area, but not sure he did it the way I'm suggesting.
Personally, I find no need to expand the sleeping area. My wife and I put our heads on the front of the A-berth, and our legs on the settees. We remove the back rests to give us a couple more inches width. I modified my cabin table to get it out of the way when we're not eating - much preferable to the difficult storage location under the berth area:
Nicely done. I also like your new tarp. Any problems with the tarp rubbing or wearing on the gelcoat. Also, how does the wind do coming from the stern? What size is the tarp?
I took a piece of PVC pipe and replaced the metal tube that supports the table. I don't recall the exact dimensions but I think it was 19" long x 3" diameter. That dropped the table to the level of the berth. With the right thickness foam, it came up to flush with the top of the v-berth mattress. The only problem is that the fittings that hold the original tube are a hair larger than 3". I used shims as an interim fix until I can come up with the right diameter tubing. The shims are less than ideal. I think I will add cleats like the ones on Paul's mod to stabilize the edges a bit better.
Notice: The advice given on this site is based upon individual or quoted experience, yours may differ. The Officers, Staff and members of this site only provide information based upon the concept that anyone utilizing this information does so at their own risk and holds harmless all contributors to this site.