Kickup cleats visited
Hi Steve, there are several basic designs, my first experience with them was on a beach cat that had aluminum tubes for 'tiller bars' which controlled the rudder action. Those cleats were 2 part - basically a tubular fiberglass mount that was split so it could be snapped onto the tiller tube - and it had a clam bolted to the top of this fiberglass 'mount'. The split was tapered on the fore side and had a pivot pin on the aft side -- so that with the rudder set and the line cleated and the tension (from bottoming out) became greater than the friction of the springy fiberglass, the split would be pulled of the tube and it would pivot aft on the pin releasing the rudder. There is a similar cleat for non-tubular mounting available in the APS catalog (http://apsltd.com/default.htm). This is the one to get if your 260 has a place to mount it and it matches your control line size. I'm not familiar with the 260 rudder design or intention-not sure what you mean by 'pivoting tiller bracket? But the 240 design is either hard cleat and the only thing that pivots up is the whole tiller,,, or tension 'wing nut'.There is one problem with this type of safety release - when it goes, it goes. The rudder will float up all the way (unless you tie a fig 8 stop in the line to keep it from going all the way) and you will have a REAL heavy helm until you reset it, so there is a period of frantic movements til its restored. This is where the other designs shine: with a spring safety mechanism, it will spring back in place once the unwanted object clears. With a tension safety mechanism (wingnut) the rudder will displace itself enuf to clear and then u reset it manually when the coast is clear. I threw out the tension option for reasons already mentioned. I did spend some considerable time trying to work a spring or bungee mech, as this is the ultimate in hands, and worry, free. The issue here lies in finding the proper SS spring with a constant thats not to weak or stiff so that it will give only if met with a foreign object and will still give enuf to clear it. Too weak a constant will allow the rudder to start to drift back at speed(I found bungees had this problem). Decided this was too complex to rig, so I settled for the kickup cleat.Hope this gets your gears turnin!Brian