Had a TR3B just before I bought my first big boat and it was a real tank. After that it was always pickups. At least I've never had a minivan.Yeah, we give the Brits a hard time about their cars, but I still have a thing for those old dry-sump Nortons, Triumphs and the exotic Vincents. A T100C still rests in my shed, ready to roll. And what little I know about DC wiring I learned struggling to keep the lights lit on an old TR5. Anyone seen one of those? (no googling).
It's pretty obvious that Lewmar has designed their windlass motors to fail (frequently) inside of anchor lockers. You do not want one of these sitting inside the locker on a hot summers day while covered with salt water.What other screwy designs have others encountered?![]()
Don't know WHY they (all of them) can't look around and get it all together. I don't think these ideas are so much a matter of cost as just sitting down and putting some thought into what they're doing.Having the "whole enchilada" with everything top quality would be 2x (or more) the sail-away cost, no doubt.
We have an electric Lewmar halyard winch on Kestrel and love it. Bought the boat new; 8 years on and no water ingress or even likelihood AFAICT. The motor is a horizontal job via a 90 degree turn. Nice design.On the vertical motors. I crewed on a bene 461 a few weeks ago, that had electric winches!
-they were really nice!!! (a little slower than 2 guys, but still nice, and we got so we were almost as fast tacking).
I wonder if they suffer the same fate as windless motors? -owner said he had them for years and years, and loved them. (I forgot to ask about his house bank and amps used). -but I could see them on my boat as I get older. (he had 2 for jib sheets, and 1 on the cabin for halyards/outhaul, etc)
anyone have experience with electric winches? -these were plates that fit below the lewmar winches
I'm not sure you can make such a blanket statement about Catalina sailboats. None of the Catalinas I have been on had inaccessible stanchion bases. I have seen many smaller boats that have NO stanchions....especially racing rigged sport boats.I second the the complaint on manufacturers who don't provide access to the underside of the stanchion bases. Of course, what they're doing is installing the stanchions before they join the deck and hull. Gee, thanks, Catalina and anyone else who does that. You really think those stanchions are going to last a lifetime?
Is this true of all of the vertical models or just certain brands?Vertical windlass motor failures are many and common. And those motors are Lucas Electric. Just saying. Until water stops flowing downward you should consider replacing your windlass with a horizontal windlass that puts the motor in a sealed compartment behind the windlass gear. It is just a better design, and you should have room for it in your anchor locker.
I just tossed my 13 year old Simpson-Lawrence (Lewmar) into the metal recycling bin over at the landfill - for want of a proprietary $600 British DC motor. The drive gears were perfect, but when the windlass housing corroded and leaked it took the electric motor.
310 Access to stanchions is a real bear as well.I'm not sure you can make such a blanket statement about Catalina sailboats. None of the Catalinas I have been on had inaccessible stanchion bases. I have seen many smaller boats that have NO stanchions....especially racing rigged sport boats.
I have never been on a C28, though.