Real men use tillers!!!
Got your attention, didn't I?I have mixed feelings about the wheel steering on our '83 H27. We owned a couple of past their prime Lightnings and a Cape Dory Typhoon before purchasing Dilemma. All our previous boats had tillers. This is our third season with a wheel.PROS: 1. Easier for the novice to steer. To go right, turn the wheel to the right.2. Easier to balance the steering, lock the wheel and duck below or run forward for a few seconds while the boat stays on course. 3. Makes the cockpit feel larger. The sweep of a tiller renders a large section toward the aft end of the cockpit almost useless under sail.CONS: 1. Lack of feeling due to the friction in the system. The tiller is much more direct.2. Slow steering. You need to turn the wheel a lot more than you need to pull or push a tiller. 3. Weather helm confusion (probably just me). With a tiller, you know immediately when you are developing weather helm and you can react instantly. It takes a little longer with the wheel. Also, if your used to tugging the tiller to weather, you need to retrain yourself to turn the wheel to leeward -- three years and I'm still having problems (may be an old dog/new tricks problem in my case).4. Puts too much weight in the stern. Not just the weight of the steering gear, but of the helmsman also.5. When single handing it's a long reach to the mainsheet and halyards since the helmsman is behind the wheel. Yes, I know you can sit forward to one side of the wheel, but the sensation is all wrong.6. Makes the cockpit seem smaller in port -- you have to keep dodging the pedestal.Paul