strakeryrius
Well-Known Member
Quote:
To my mind, the skipper's decision is easy. If the diagram is to be believed, then if he stops dead in the water, then both ships will pass ahead of him so IMHO, thats the safest thing to do.
I considered that, as the diagram shows the nearer ship will pass approx 1/8th NM away. However, as this is a "busy channel" what you don't know is what other vessels are going to be behind the two that are the threat at the moment, and what vessels may be coming the other way if you just sit there in the middle of it.
The other consideration has to be what are you going to do once they are past. Will you sit there and try to check your engines in the middle of the channel? I don't think that would be safe - you want to be out of the channel while doing that, so it makes sense to start back out of the channel at the earliest opportunity. It would only be worth stopping if you were sure that you were going to press on with one engine later.
To my mind, the skipper's decision is easy. If the diagram is to be believed, then if he stops dead in the water, then both ships will pass ahead of him so IMHO, thats the safest thing to do.
I considered that, as the diagram shows the nearer ship will pass approx 1/8th NM away. However, as this is a "busy channel" what you don't know is what other vessels are going to be behind the two that are the threat at the moment, and what vessels may be coming the other way if you just sit there in the middle of it.
The other consideration has to be what are you going to do once they are past. Will you sit there and try to check your engines in the middle of the channel? I don't think that would be safe - you want to be out of the channel while doing that, so it makes sense to start back out of the channel at the earliest opportunity. It would only be worth stopping if you were sure that you were going to press on with one engine later.