K9Kampers wrote: ↑Tue Jul 28, 2020 8:35 am
Jimmyt wrote: ↑Tue Jul 28, 2020 7:25 am
Stock kitchen wastebasket won't clear the frame on the forward end for removal from the cabinet. Don't want to make unit taller. Will need to trim approximately 2" off top of wastebasket to work. Should put finger holes in the side of the wastebasket to facilitate easy removal.
My advice from BTDT, is to try thinking outside the box when building the galley box. IMO, designing around a conventional wastebasket on a boat is throwing away useful space!
A waste strategy to consider is first reduce / minimize cardboard / hard trash. When stocking food, I dont like cardboard on my boat. Boxed foods have bags in them that store easier in less space. Boxed wine comes in a bladder. AL cans and plastic bottles crush. Only really good wine / beer / spirits exempt the no glass practice.
Crushable trash goes in plastic grocery bags, which can store anywhere.
The space saved by eliminating a dedicated wastebasket now creates more space real essentials like water jugs, waste tank, beer storage, etc...
The rules of designing a house kitchen do not have to apply to a boat / RV galley.
The bigger the galley mod, the more excercise you will get by climbing in and out of the boat. Cut - shape - fit - recut - reshape - refit - repeat...!!
Great points on waste reduction/control! I had to look up BTDT

.
I love cooking. I don't like boat clutter. Currently, the galley does nothing to promote cooking or reduce clutter. I'm conceptually adding 4 drawers and two tilt-out storage areas, in addition to making the trash convenient and invisible. Trash is probably not a big deal to most, but it's kind of a thing for me. Daysailing is particularly trashy. Maybe I'm doing it wrong.
Kitchens, to be enjoyably functional for me, have to have certain components located within reach. RV, boat, house, are all the same to me - just different scale. While I won't be able to outfit the Mac galley like our home kitchen, it doesn't mean I won't try to get close.
I am planning on moving the water storage deeper in the hull, possibly increasing it, and adding a 12v pump. While I will build the galley light, it will be heavier than stock, and taller. So I'll move the water storage lower to help offset some of that - and to keep the extra weight off the liner.
While most say, "the devil is in the details", I feel that is where the joy is. I spent a career working on details of large, complex mechanical/control systems. This project, is microscopic, but it offers some joy due to the tight spaces, pre-existing components (seat cushions, ladder, interior arrangement, etc). This may turn into a project before it's over, but it will likely just be recreation for a weird old retired guy.

It's good to shake the dust off of my two remaining brain cells - every now and then.
While I intend to get the design so close that I won't have to move it in and out of the boat much, I promise to post if I screw it up and wind up throwing it in and out several times. That way you guys can enjoy the show! Anyway, I need the exercise!
Thanks for the great feedback!