macd
Well-Known Member
Stainless steel is OK for long-keeled mobos.
...and long-keeled minesweepers, of course.
Stainless steel is OK for long-keeled mobos.
If you have gone bows to on a pontoon then before leaving tie a slip spring from a centre cleat to a cleat on the pontoon level or close to the stern. Run the engine for 4 minutes at 1,200 rpm that gets water flowing over the rudder and the boat will go straight.
When going astern don't keep power on blip the throttle and the boat will go straight.
If you have gone bows to on a pontoon then before leaving tie a slip spring from a centre cleat to a cleat on the pontoon level or close to the stern. Run the engine for 4 minutes at 1,200 rpm that gets water flowing over the rudder and the boat will go straight. I'm amazed this has never been published in a sailing mag and it isn't common knowledge among the long keel community. It's easy and not a rudder issue, all long keel boats do the same as you say.
It sounds like a good idea and Oldvarnish obviously gets it.
I am totally lost .
Are you suggesting motoring forward on the spring for 4 minutes and then reverse out ?
Many Thanks
Tried that. It does not work.
I think I hate you.
I spent £1100 quid having a thruster fitted to Olive (CW35) for exactly that purpose
A bucket would have been a lot cheaper
I'm now going off to kick the cat
OK. Let me be more precise. In dead calm conditions - no waves and no wind whatsoever, after a run up at pull power in reverse for about 1/3 of a mile - by which time I get to about 5 knots, if I put the engine in neutral, the boat will go more or less straight and with a little bit of rudder I can persuade it to go in either direction or keep it straight. But once the speed drops off below 5 knots, then the boat veers off to one side or the other (more often port than starboard - no idea why) and no amount of rudder in either direction has any noticeable effect.
I.e. to all intents and purposes, (e.g. backing up a marina access channel), it does not work.
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Sorry I wasn't clear, obviously put the engine in reverse.
tie a slip spring from a centre cleat to a cleat on the pontoon level or close to the stern. Run the engine for 4 minutes at 1,200 rpm that gets water flowing over the rudder and the boat
Suggestions about building up speed astern are useless to me. If I have room to reach 3 knots astern then I have room to turn round; and there is no way I am going to risk charging astern at that sort of speed between two lines of expensive and shiny boats![]()
It would have been nice if I had a quick removable bow thruster that drops at one side near the bow and then lift up and packs away; but I don't and there is none in the market.
There is something similar. Son Owen has used an electric outboard very successfully as a stern thruster on his steel yacht. With some ingenuity I guess it could be used forward.