I think it is about the type of boat one buys and the type of sailing one does.
I have seen a few 40 to 50 foot boats, ocean cruising vessels, with a tiller and I think that is just plain crazy. A tiller on a bigger boat is a big, powerful and dangerous wooden bar that could swing across the cockpit and do one serious harm. However, with an outboard rudder, which often comes with a tiller, one can easily install a trim tab wind vane, which is by far the most efficient and reliable steering gear ever invented, which is a huge plus. Unless the conditions are too extreme for the vane gear. Then, we're back to absolutely insane!
I had to hand steer for 22 hours straight in a storm in the Atlantic on my way to the Canaries. I probably would not have been able to manage it with tiller steering. Perhaps the vane gear could have done the job, but in waves so large that the whole boat (37') fit easily on the face of each breaking wave, I wasn't about to find out.
For day sailing or the occasional coastal cruise on a smaller boat, I see it as a personal choice, but for seafaring I'm a firm believer in wheel steering.
I have seen a few 40 to 50 foot boats, ocean cruising vessels, with a tiller and I think that is just plain crazy. A tiller on a bigger boat is a big, powerful and dangerous wooden bar that could swing across the cockpit and do one serious harm. However, with an outboard rudder, which often comes with a tiller, one can easily install a trim tab wind vane, which is by far the most efficient and reliable steering gear ever invented, which is a huge plus. Unless the conditions are too extreme for the vane gear. Then, we're back to absolutely insane!
I had to hand steer for 22 hours straight in a storm in the Atlantic on my way to the Canaries. I probably would not have been able to manage it with tiller steering. Perhaps the vane gear could have done the job, but in waves so large that the whole boat (37') fit easily on the face of each breaking wave, I wasn't about to find out.
For day sailing or the occasional coastal cruise on a smaller boat, I see it as a personal choice, but for seafaring I'm a firm believer in wheel steering.