tidclacy
Well-Known Member
My Wife reckons woman are better than men at Steering. What does the panel think?
My Wife reckons woman are better than men at Steering. What does the panel think?
Absolutely. The rudder always operates as a brake and the aim is always to use the least possible. This means that the sails must be balanced so that the boat "wants" to sail where the helmsman does. It is relatively easy in most conditions to sail a steady course without moving the helm at all but just varying the pressure.
The aim of the helmsman shouldn't be to "steer" the boat but to re-balance the helm to allow the boat to go in the desired direction. Historically, large sailing ships were always steered by sail adjustment and I believe that in some instances the rudder was only capable of 15 degrees of course change.
However, on a 43 ft Beneteau Oceanis on an ocean passage a few years ago the fastest white-sail broad reaching sped was achieved with an almost continual about 15-20 degrees of rudder, dragging a big quarter wave and loads of turbulence, and occasionally getting onto a surf when you could finally get the rudder central again. Tried everything to avoid the rudder angle, but everything that trimmed that out slowed the boat from averaging 10-11 knots plus quite frequent 13-14 surfs down to 8-9 with very few surfs.
You needed a big spin of the wheel at times to keep it under control and pick up waves. One of the helms just couldn't do this (dial-watcher), and if X was on the helm the average speed dropped significantly. A big ram-drive autopilot was not bad, but not as good as a dinghy sailor on the helm.
Conversely in light airs on a displacement boat a very steady helm is often fastest...
My Wife reckons woman are better than men at Steering. What does the panel think?
Tillers are for people who like sailing their boat, wheels are for those who like space in the cockpit. I'm torn between the two but ultimately think I'd go with a wheel for the space advantage. It's always nicer entertaining when you don't kneecap your guests with a big stick![]()
..... You needed a big spin of the wheel at times to keep it under control and pick up waves. ....
There's something about that spin of the wheel - it maybe lifts the stern a bit and breaks the suction under the back of the hull to let the boat start planing? ....
All the tillers I've ever seen (almost) have been capable of being raised to leave a clear cockpit. Wheels do have certain advantages but cockpit space is not one of them.
I understand that at speeds its easy for the rudder to loose efficiency due to fast water and turbulence caused by the hull speed and water speed within the wave; airation in the water perhaps also contributed. A long time ago I read that some Whitbread yachts had a gear on the pedestal so the rudder could be moved from side to side with small wheel movements when surfing to make them steer better.
Bluddy hard to steer with it vertical though eh?
Back to the original question: unless offwind in strong winds when you're into fast wheelspinning to keep control I almost never stand behind the wheel: either sitting to leeward or up to windward, and either one hand or one foot on wheel. My present modern boat will not steer herself, but I've had a couple that would do this very nicely to windward with tiller lashed, and I used that a lot.We tried a few different ways of steering the boat:
a) standing manfully behind the wheel like you see the pros doing on youtube.
b) sitting on the coaming and steering one handed
c) locking off the steering and letting the boat steer herself
no d) - we haven't got an autopilot.
Disappointingly for all our egos, c) was consistently the fastest, and a) the slowest - I suppose we end up wagging the wheel a little as we keep ourselves upright.
Are we just rubbish at steering or has anyone else tried with similar results? Where does an autopilot figure on the list?
Back to the original question: unless offwind in strong winds when you're into fast wheelspinning to keep control I almost never stand behind the wheel: either sitting to leeward or up to windward, and either one hand or one foot on wheel. My present modern boat will not steer herself, but I've had a couple that would do this very nicely to windward with tiller lashed, and I used that a lot.
Etap's seem to have a vertical rudder. Not sure how the linkage works.
whipstaff: vertical lever controlling ship's rudder
My Wife reckons woman are better than men at Steering. What does the panel think?
Without doubt 90% of the time women are better at steering than men. Men are to mechanical women tend to feel it better..
Then on the reverse hand 90% of men are better at tuning rigging and finer points of setting sails...
If my sister or SWMBO are at the stick/ wheel the boat goes faster... I can then tweek the ropes normally we gain 0.5 of knot or more...
They are very singleminded, and don't get distracted, but they don't know about windshifts and don't look ahead.