J
Joe Lucido
Could you post all this on your site??My brave Brother in Law, Tim Kent, is doing the "Around Alone" race....around the world in a 50' Open class sailboat, by himself. AroundAlone.com He is having some problems with the autopilots I have thrown the other stuff in with it for interest. Of course it is hard to sleep without an Autopilot, and sleep is crucial to our well being. Anybody out there ever had this kind of problem?Read his description below.His web site is: Everesthorizontal.com because this is equavalent to climbing Mount Everest, just horizontal.He also needs sponsors...with the least sponsors of anyone in the race, he finished 3rd on the leg to England from the New York Harbor start. He is on the way to Cape Town. Really interesting information to follow.Joe-----Original Message-----From: Everest Horizontal [mailto:lboits@netnitco.net]Sent: Thursday, October 31, 2002 1:14 PMTo: "Undisclosed-Recipient:;"@mailbox.hp.comSubject: EVEREST HORIZONTAL Upate - Halloween26.10.06n16.06.49wI grew up in the Detroit area suburbs, and on the night before Halloween,which wecalled Devil's Night, we kids would all sneak around the neighborhood, ringdoorbells,soap windows and throw toilet paper at houses. The big kids in the toughneighborhoods in Detroit ran around and tried to burn the city to theground. Devil's Night is a thing of the past, but I got my own version ofit out here last night.I haven't said anything about this in the hope that it would go away, but itis not - the autopilots are doing exactly the same thing on this leg thatthey did in the last. In any reaching situation in wind over ten knots, theboat wanders through more than EIGHTY degrees - over forty either side ofthe set course. The results are unpredictable at best, disasterous atworst. Last night as I was celebrating the return of some decent breeze onthe beam, the boat started doing its dance again.On the third crash gybe, I decided to gybe the boat on purpose and startedto furl the Code 0, which I do every time I gybe. Suddenly, the lineholding the tack of the Code 0 pulled itself out of its core, and suddenly Ihad the biggest genoa on the boat loose and flogging around.By the time I had gotten to it, the furler's tack line had wrapped itselfaround the furler seven or eight times. I took the mangled tack line backto a snatch block at the mast and used the halyard winch to draw it back tothe bowsprit loosely, then went forward to unwrap the thing. That done, Idrewthe tack line and halyards tight and went back to furl the Code 0 the restof the way. All this time the wind was building a bit, and the sail was notfurling up properly, so that when it was done, the top of the sail was notproperly furled. Unfurling it in building wind at 2:00 am was not anoption, so I decided to take the partially furled sail down and get itbelow. The Code 0 comes down with its furling unit, so you can imagine thesteps required on a pitching deck in the dark in about 15 knots of wind -alone. It's the "partially furled" part that made the process the mostinteresting. It took about half an hour.Once put away, I rolled out the genoa and tried to get some sleep. We werestill wandering 30 to 40 degrees, so sleep is not easy, but I got some rest.We are through the Canaries. I went between Grand Canary and Fuerteventuralast night. It was very hazy as I approached the islands and dark as I wentthrough them, so I missed seeing what I understand are some of the prettiestislands in the Atlantic. Once through, I gybed (above) out to get somedistance off the shore. I will shortly gybe back to head south again.Kojiro Shiraishi has rocketed up into second place out west. Brad and therest of us are pinned in by the coast of Africa. I was so close to Derrickat one of the position reports that I picked up the VHF and called him. Tomy delight he answered and we talked several times last night. We talkedabout the general concern in Class 2 about the amount of time we will havein Cape Town. The schedule is such that I would need to arrive there onemonth from today in order to have just a week to prepare for the SouthernOcean. One month to cover 6000 miles is asking a lot, especially withdoldrums as part of the picture. I have two priorities in Cape Town.Prepare the boat for the first Southern Ocean leg, the biggest test yet.And prepare myself mentally for the Southern Ocean, which includes spendinga week with my children, whom I have not seen since September 15th - it willbe at least December 1st before I see them in Cape Twon. We are currentlyticketshopping for Whitney and Alison, but need to figure out when I am going tobe leaving - and arriving - before doing anything about it. It's a bigissue for all of the Class 2 boats.Well, I have sent off my frantic e-mail to the people at the manufacturer ofthe autopilots asking for helpwith the various programming adjustments that can be made to the pilots - Iwill now wait until they get to work and see if we can give this thing asedative.Have a Happy Halloween!Tim OUR SPONSORS: Charleston Boatworks www.charlestonboatworks.com Orbitz www.orbitz.com Foley and Lardner Attorneys www.foleylaw.com Boaters Miniweb www.bminiweb.com Dell Computer www.dell.com Harken Yacht Equipment www.harken.com One World Sailing Ventures www.1wsv.com Milwaukee Yacht Club www.milwaukeeyc.com Young, Stone & Kennedy, LLP (no website) Waretech Advanced Network Solutions (no website) Digital Visions of Milwaukee www.digivis.com The Computer Management Group, Inc. 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