Foxy
Well-Known Member
This happened a couple of years ago and I had forgotten about it, however a similar incident last week prompted me to write about both (see next post).
Now before anyone accuses me of Bavaria Bashing, this could happen on any similar set up. I was teaching on a Bavaria at the time and thus.....etc
We were downwind sailing in a F8 - only in the Solent - big waves and lots of fun for the students. About a mile west of the forts, one of the team was, unusually, making a real hash of steering, so I asked for the helm only to find the rudder only operating between Stbd and REALLY stbd. Given our proximity to shipping lane and Ryde sands, we were in a bit of a pickle. To cut a long story short, in the rough weather, the quadrant had slipped on the shaft so it could only make a quarter turn before hitting the hull. Normally, this is prevented by a set screw into a dimple on the shaft, however following recent maintenance, this had not been relocated correctly.
We managed to wrench the shaft back to position with three big blokes and the emergency tiller (we had tied the quadrant off to one side, no allen keys on board to move it!!)
The easy corrective action that we decided on afterwards was to drill the 'dimple' through into the shaft so it located more positively as it is really hard to tell if its locked under normal circumstances. Might be worth thinking about if you have to drop the rudder at any time. (which incidentally, is easily possible with the boat in the water)
Hope this helps.
Patrick
www.yachtfoxglove.com
Now before anyone accuses me of Bavaria Bashing, this could happen on any similar set up. I was teaching on a Bavaria at the time and thus.....etc
We were downwind sailing in a F8 - only in the Solent - big waves and lots of fun for the students. About a mile west of the forts, one of the team was, unusually, making a real hash of steering, so I asked for the helm only to find the rudder only operating between Stbd and REALLY stbd. Given our proximity to shipping lane and Ryde sands, we were in a bit of a pickle. To cut a long story short, in the rough weather, the quadrant had slipped on the shaft so it could only make a quarter turn before hitting the hull. Normally, this is prevented by a set screw into a dimple on the shaft, however following recent maintenance, this had not been relocated correctly.
We managed to wrench the shaft back to position with three big blokes and the emergency tiller (we had tied the quadrant off to one side, no allen keys on board to move it!!)
The easy corrective action that we decided on afterwards was to drill the 'dimple' through into the shaft so it located more positively as it is really hard to tell if its locked under normal circumstances. Might be worth thinking about if you have to drop the rudder at any time. (which incidentally, is easily possible with the boat in the water)
Hope this helps.
Patrick
www.yachtfoxglove.com