As I recall the Brits are ahead of us on this. Steve would have more information but as I recall somebody on their side of the pond had developed a kit for a secondary rudder.I always just trick Lyric. When I want the stern to go to starboard I just say go to port three or four times times and invariably she goes to starboard.It is possible to swing the stern by reving the engine with the prop in gear. I've done it a couple of times in the past but forget the particulars on how to do it. You want to have a decent amount of room to do it in. Walt, Lyric To:
AlbinVega@yahoogroups.comFrom:
AlbinVega@yahoogroups.comDate: Tue, 15 Jul 2014 19:50:16 -0400Subject: Re: [AlbinVega] Springing off from the stern
John, been thinking about this and had a little trouble getting my
head around it. I kept wanting to think about a propellar in front
of the rudder. Where a spring line going forward on the boat alloys
you to go ahead and swing the stern out and then back away. I have
done it with my vega and it seems to work but not as good as when
you have propwash going around the rudder from the prop.
You said you put the helm to port
and that threw me off but it likely made no difference. I am
thinking the starboard stern cleat wound up being the pivoting
point as the boat was held in by the line to the dock cleat and
the other end going around the winch on the port side keept the
boat from moving forward so if you let it pay out slow the bow
could swing out. Since the propeller is on the center line of the
boat it is about 3 ft from the cleat and pivot point. So the prop
on a 3ft lever arm on a 27 ft boat turning into the wind did not
have any mechanical advantage but with the wind mostly off the bow
it didn't have that much area to press against either. If the
wind had been 90 deg. off the bow I would say there is a good
possibility you might swing the boat out but I suspect it may have
taken full throttle to push the bow out far enough to leave the
dock. I am not sure I would have guts enough to open the throttle
with the bow of my boat only a few feet away from another boat?
I am in a narrow slip the first on on a dock and one side of
it is a bulkhead. I come in slow and about 10 feet from the
bulkhead I put the tiller to port hard and put the engine in
revers my wife steps off the boat with a bow line in hand and ties
it off forward on the bulkhead a couple fenders for a cushion hit
the bulkhead and a little reverse throttle I tie off the rest of
the dock lines. The natural tendency to back to port keeps the
boat against the bulkhead as it backs and my wife holds it off. If
a strong wind is pus- hing her sideways onto the bulkhead we both
get off and walk her back. On the starboard side there is a
forty ft slip so there is a piling on my starboard side that is
right far ahead of my boat. When we leave the dock we untie and my
takes a turn around a shroud with the starboard bow line and I
creep forward and that swings us around bow out. She throws the
dock line on top the piling for a quick retrieval when returning.
There are boats in from of my slip and I can't get enough speed up
to turn before getting to those boats if the wind is coming from
the right direction so the turn around the piling is essential.
People are amazed that we can get in and out and we just except
the praise. Its the easiest slip in the marina to get in and out
of but we keep that to ourselves. So in fact my wife docks the
boat coming in and steers her on the way out. I was recently told,
Captain you can really handle that little boat. Thank you I
replied. My wife wasn't there to kick me.
-- Doug Pollard Albin Vega Sea Legs 2225 KK4YGO