Trident
Well-Known Member
Can anyone explain to me why catamarans have two rudders other than why would you not fit one to each hull?
I recently met a man in Spain who, after a fire, had rebuilt his Prout cat, leaving the stock two rudders in place but also adding centrally a third rudder which could connect to a wind vane. He then found that using just this centrally mounted rudder (which was originally to be emergency steering when the wind vane was not attached) was much lighter and more responsive than the original hydraulic twin rudder set up. It was also positioned behind the central drive leg on the Prout meaning that he had prop wash over the rudder too.
So he had simply locked off the original rudders never to be turned again and used the central one all the time. Obviously this is just anecdotal evidence but it made me wonder if there was a reason architecturally why cats always have one rudder per hull ?
I recently met a man in Spain who, after a fire, had rebuilt his Prout cat, leaving the stock two rudders in place but also adding centrally a third rudder which could connect to a wind vane. He then found that using just this centrally mounted rudder (which was originally to be emergency steering when the wind vane was not attached) was much lighter and more responsive than the original hydraulic twin rudder set up. It was also positioned behind the central drive leg on the Prout meaning that he had prop wash over the rudder too.
So he had simply locked off the original rudders never to be turned again and used the central one all the time. Obviously this is just anecdotal evidence but it made me wonder if there was a reason architecturally why cats always have one rudder per hull ?