VO5
Well-Known Member
If I was as long-winded as you I could bore everyone to death explaining in enormous detail why the JSD is a much better device than the Seabrake in extreme conditions, but I won't bore everyone rigid with 'facts' that are irrelevant to the original subject of the thread.
Fascadale has indicated that he was looking for advice on building a JSD, which some of us have tried to give him. Unfortunately it has been drowned out by your deluge of irrelevant (to this thread) verbiage.
So - give us a 'brake' and take a telling. Go and start your own thread.
- W
You don't get my drift at all.
I tried to give you a hint earlier on, but it seems to have fallen on deaf ears.
I am trying to be helpful by gently suggesting that the ideas that you have and the tedious effort you commit yourself to in building this contraption are unnecessary and may prove to be unsatisfactory for the following reasons :~
First of all there is a vast difference between fanciful theory and practical application in that not everything created turns out to be perfect because a government agency approves it. There may be better solutions that the government department is not made aware of. Therefore the pronouncement that the government department makes cannot be relied upon implicitly since that pronouncement is made on information that is incomplete. Therefore the pronouncement through not having complete information may actually turn out at best unsatisfactory and at worst inconvenient and even potentially dangerous.
The finished contraption has been acknowledged here to be heavy and bulky.
Heavy kit is not fun to handle in a crisis and bulky kit is not fun to store in a marine environment in which space is at a premium, that is, without considering ease of immediate accessibility.
Then you must concede that the contraption may be easy to deploy if prepared properly to run but a job and a half to retrieve, the disadvantage being the difficulty of winching in with all the cones in the way.
You may argue in favour of heaving to in order to retrieve, but I reason you want a method of being able to retieve with the option of being underway and making way through the water with minimum difficulty.
Then again after all the toil and time involved in constructing the contraption it does not fulfil (and I have PRACTICAL experience of it) the two criteria of maintaining wholly reliable directional stability and keeping the vessel's stern down, thouigh I will concede it will slow down a vessel but there again a tyre on a rope will do this.
But even a tyre on a rope towed will give better directional stability of sorts against the idea of a chain of evenly spaced mini buckets as the tow line would be stretched in a manner that the final pressure would be at the end of it and not fractionally distributed throughout.
So what I am posting is not verbiage.
What I am trying to do for you is to prevent you from doing a lot of unnecessary work to achieve results that can be bettered, with less effort , greater comfort, and greater certainty of use, I respectfully submit to you.
There are many voluminous tomes written about this subject. What really counts is practical experience which I have and quite obviously you haven't, therefore I am trying to pass on to you the benefit of my experience, that you should be properly informed, to your benefit, and my satisfaction.