G
Gerry Libertelli
Hi All,I have an interesting experience to share with everyone. Those who have looked at that emergency tiller but have not used it, take heed.This weekend (9/16), my wife and I were sailing our 1999 380 off Sandy Hook (NJ) in about 23-24 Kts of wind. I was heavily reefed and was still taking quite a beating by extremely rough tides and capping seas at about 3 - 3 1/2 ft. Quite an experience, but one Im used to out there.Usually, Im fighting the wheel the whole way in, and that is obviously to be expected. Well this time, the steering cable snapped in the middle of a 22 Kt gust. My vessel went to weather as expected and I quickly took down my sails and threw the anchor. Sea Towed it all the way back because that dammed emergency tiller wont fit if your rudder is locked hard over. All in all, this was my first real emergency in weather, and my 380 handled things quite nicely (did what was expected). Two observations/questions:1. Is popping the steering cable a common thing? I know I put a lot of stress on it because of the current in the Hudson River and offshore. If so, can I put a thicker gauge cable on the steering? Would this have any performance impact?2. Having your rudder hard over in a situaion like this would be a fact since the boat will go to weather and it is swinging loose. Is there a better solution for being able to engage the emergency rudder shaft? The seats on the 380 are high, and the emergency tiller has a low right angle (hangs just above the floor). So catching the bar it is supposed to fit into is an impossibility until SeaTow starts pulling you forward. 180 bucks later.Anyone have anything for this? Nasty situation, but it sure is neat to have my first sailing story.........maybe not.Gerry