prv
Well-Known Member
You've given me food for thought about the inevitable day the Beta packs up.
Uh oh, it's catching
Pete
You've given me food for thought about the inevitable day the Beta packs up.
I know that "now owned by his son" thing. Dad 'gave' me the Westerly when he'd finished with it.
I think M01 (first Pageant) is just down the river from me at Hamble Point. I rowed past it in Autumn and it is a very fine looking example.
I think there's a chap on this forum who knows all about it and the old boy - who was a test-pilot - who owned her.
Im wrong about it being no 1 then if dennis warren had it before 1977. Ive no idea why I thought it was no 1. I never saw itJust to set the record straight; Pageant No.1 ' LGee ' was owned by Dennis Warren,
Gosh Ive never asked for any boat I've sailed on to be lifted/hauled and inspected first .Cant be too careful though I suppose. I knew someone about 30 years ago whose not very old Pegasus 800 sank in mid channel. Exact reason not known but something to do with rudder or skeg.The discussion about Centaur keels here has gone out of all proportion, I'm a natural worrier but would happily sail one anywhere after a hoisted or dried out inspection, just like any other boat.
Was that one of the Westerly Vulcans. They creaked alarmingly when settling into and out of mud!
Slight thread drift folks. Seeing that photo of an outboard bracket on a Centaur and hearing about another one in a link Dylan posted, is this a viable option? Thinking of me not Dylan.
I may have missed this before, certainly not seen that pic of the outboard superimposed on the cockpit diagram before, but two points spring to mind:
The rudder stock is more or less at cockpit sole level, you will need a good extension to get over the O/B if you do it as diagram, and then you won't need the swan neck tiller. The swan neck tiller may just clear the O/B but it doesn't look like it will on that drawing.
The cockpit drains are at the back edge of the cockpit sole, they will be isolated from what they are supposed to be draining. I would take the oportunity to do away with the existing ones and use the well.
here is a plan...
sell the boat to me,I will remove the old lump, do the conversion, sail her for a year, sell her back to you
you already have a well in the Anerson, you know they work, you are not really rich enough to own an inboard yacht.
D
all I am missing is the right boat in the right place at the right price
so if anyone can find me one
dylan.winter@virgin.net
A good point about the tiller, it takes up the whole cockpit as standard so a change would be a good idea.
Dylan, I get the impression you'll be leaving the outboard in the well all the time, not stowing it and fitting a fairing plug as Anderson 22's do ?
A friend with an A22 tried a modified plug with a shaped hole to allow the engine leg to poke through, there were brush bristles fitted so as to make a semi-seal !
All in the name of reducing drag, and noise; a lot of people don't realise how noisy the turbulence in wells is, particularly with the engine out.
The experiment on the Anderson plug didn't work out, the engine seemed to be overheating; but my chum didn't pursue the idea, it might be worth considering.
I saw a Julian Everitt design once which had a Seagull raising into a well in the bridgedeck on rails, with doors in the hull like aircraft undercarriage, all on linkages; seemed like ' a good idea in the pub ' but I didn't fancy its' chances after first contact with mud and stones !
I have sometimes wondered if a rubber car mat bonded to the leading edge of a well might reduce drag, but I haven't needed to try it, as I say I lift and stow my engine.
Just thoughts...
Apologies if this has been covered already, but it might be worth thinking about longitudinal trim, taking the weight of the engine out, especially as the fresh water tank is in the front; maybe an idea to relocate it - you could always have tanks above the keels and pump the stuff side to side when tacking like the racing heroes !![]()
Watermouth has a yacht club they may help
http://www.watermouthyachtclub.co.uk