crisjones
Well-Known Member
None of this is about willy waving, it is about common sense.
Furthermore it is about not expending unnecssary energy.
As the Seabrake dogue has several functions, one of these is to reduce rolling at an anchorage by hanging it from the end of the boomed out boom, so one sunny calm day in the open Atlantic in the Azores High, we decided to carry out a practical experiment...
Instead of deploying it from the stern we decided to deploy it from the bow, as if it were a para anchor. We brought down all sail...
The result was startling.
The water was very clear and we could look all the way down the tow and could see the drogue clearly.
What happened was this:
The drogue and chain fell vertically. To our surprise it began to be pulled by the current at an angle underneath the boat. There was no wind.
So we pulled it in. As we did so a very big fish followed it to the surface and swam away before it broke surface.
We came to the conclusion that streaming from the bow is pointless.
We then deployed it from the stern. The current began to tow it backwards gently. As there was no wind and the sea was dead flat, it didn't matter.
But we reasoned that if the wind arrived, ther drogue was already in the correct place to be efficient.
It is so obvious I cannot understand this persistence in clinging to outmoded ideas.![]()
I cannot see much "common sense" in this post from VO5, perhaps I am not looking at it from the right angle???
Quite what is going to be proved by deploying a Sea Brake in flat calm, windless conditions, I do not know. The device is designed to be used as a braking device in bad conditions.
VO5 states that the current pulled the drogue under the boat when it was streamed from the bow and the current pulled the drogue behind the boat when it was streamed from the stern. What would have happened if the boat had been turned through 180 degrees and the experiment repeated??? Almost certainly the results would have been the exact opposite. Quite clearly if the only force acting on the drogue is the current, then the drogue will always be pulled in the direction of the current, regardless of where it is attached to the boat.
As we have already said - a drogue is designed be attached to the stern of a boat and is put there to slow the boat down and maintain directional stability. A drogue should never be deployed from the bows. A parachute is designed to anchor the boat to the sea, ie to effectively STOP the boat, as such it should be deployed from the bows in the same way as you normally deploy a steel anchor and warp.
VO5 is certainly entitled to his opinions based on his own experience, however he does need to accept that his conclusions are not neccesarily correct for anyone else. There is no one solution to managing storm conditions on a small boat. Some of his posts even seem to be in direct contradiction to the information posted on the Sea Brake website - I would suggest that the manufacturer of the device is much better informed about his product than one single user (even if he is a satisfied user)