Rocker stoppers - any good?

stuartwineberg

Well-Known Member
Joined
24 Oct 2007
Messages
1,813
Location
Romsey, Hants
Visit site
We have a semi displacement motor boat and it rolls at anchor. There have been threads in the past relating to home made flopper stoppers and there is a fancy Magma gadget that seems to be only available in the USA. The only thing that seems to be around in the UK is the "rocker stopper" - basically a string of small traffic cones that you dangle.

Questions - any one tried them and do they work?

The makers diagram shows them dropped off the guardrail - is that Ok or do you need some sort of poling out arrangement?

Thanks

Stuart
 
I have had the chance to use a homemade device that someone gave me. It was a triangular piece of marine ply about 24 inches along the edges with a weight in one corner.
I hung it from the main boom of my old gaff cutter and swung the boom out. Like a lot of steel boats she would roll in dry dock given the chance. Result was an improvement from a quick jerky roll to a more sedate slow roll, didn't cure it totally though.
I think to get the best effect you would ideally need to rig it on a boom or pole. She was a heavy boat and there was a fair strain on anything that tried to slow her natural roll. Your boat may be different of course. Don't pay a lot of money for something, have a search round for "Flopper Stopper" (seriously) good luck.
 
I have had the chance to use a homemade device that someone gave me. It was a triangular piece of marine ply about 24 inches along the edges with a weight in one corner.
I hung it from the main boom of my old gaff cutter and swung the boom out. Like a lot of steel boats she would roll in dry dock given the chance. Result was an improvement from a quick jerky roll to a more sedate slow roll, didn't cure it totally though.
I think to get the best effect you would ideally need to rig it on a boom or pole. She was a heavy boat and there was a fair strain on anything that tried to slow her natural roll. Your boat may be different of course. Don't pay a lot of money for something, have a search round for "Flopper Stopper" (seriously) good luck.

Bigger the boat bigger the triangle or 2, 1 on each side if your there for any length of time. He didn't mention string to each corner all same length, the weight enough to sink it one corner first.
 
We met a Belgian guy in Andraitx who suggested a plastic dustbin lid with a weight at one corner of the triangle, poled out on the boom.

I didnt find one, and never got around to it after that.
 
I remember seeing a design for a home made device of a bread tray (the ones with perforated bottoms) with two bits of ply hinged in them as a 'one way flap valve. The whole things needs weighting with weights on the ply as well, but the mechanics are very simple. Works best when suspended from a boom perpendicular to the boat. (Better leverage from the boom end than from the rubbing strake.)
 
Best solution after trying a flopper stopper type of contraption (home made) was to get the kedge anchor out. Just hold the bow to any swell and there is virtually no roll.
 
Top