Tiller Pilot on H23
Our 86 came with a First Mate autopilot that had broken wires and had not been used in years. I cleaned it up, fixed the wiring and hooked it up to a battery in my shop. Amazingly, it immediately began hunting for the heading it was on! Here is how it is setup: There is a simple bracket attached with 2 screws about 3" below the top of the starboard coaming, on the seat back. A brass pin is attached to the underside of the tiller. The pilot is attached by inserting the mounting pin on the pilot into the seat back bracket and the arm of the pilot is lashed onto the pin on the tiller, from the underside. A bungee or small line works fine. This arrangement is not ideal. If the arm could sit on top of the tiller, it would be easier to deploy and then detach. But, you already see the design problem involved. Also, the seat back bracket can poke you in the back when seated on the starboard side when the pilot is not in use. The female end of the power connection is mounted snug in a hole drilled through the teak toerail on the starboard side. The wires run under the cockpit, directly to the battery. The wiring exiting the pilot terminates with the male plug. The pilot housing contains an on/off switch, so I don't run in through my fuse box. I believe it has a fuse inside the pilot housing, but it has never blown and I've never gone looking for it. This contraption actually works quite well, but it's diligence in making minor adjustments to hold course drive the Admiral batty. I suppose fussing with the sensitivity adjustment could make it operate a bit lazier and quieter. Finally, it has a hard wired remote tethered to about 12' of old style telephone cord. All in all, it's a pretty complicated example of '80's technology added on to an otherwise pretty simple boat.