| Beach Cat Steering Modification #48157 04/28/05 09:17 AM 04/28/05 09:17 AM |
Joined: Jan 2005 Posts: 3 windwardrail OP
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Posts: 3 | A few years ago a bought an early Prindle 18. Last season I finaly had the time to sail it often. Thanks in large part to excellent tips and advice posted here I learned a lot and had a blast when I flew a hull briefly. Thanks to all of you who take the time to donate your knowledge. When gybing the P18 I find myself looking and sometimes facing aft ready to get my arm out of the way of the traveller as it flys across the rear beam. Most all beach cats have the traveller located forward of the steering bar. On my P18 the traveler car does not run the length of the rear beam. It seems I could lengthen the rudder arms and move the steering bar forward of the traveler. I suspect this doing this would imped sheeting the main and traveler car and might interfer with a crew memeber trapped out far aft on the hull. Has anyone tried this modification or is it simply a bad idea ? Sail Fast,
Doug Kilgore
Prindle 18 # 0073
| | | Re: Beach Cat Steering Modification
[Re: windwardrail]
#48158 04/28/05 09:26 AM 04/28/05 09:26 AM |
Joined: Feb 2005 Posts: 1,382 Essex, UK Jalani
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Posts: 1,382 Essex, UK | The Hobie Wave that I sailed on holiday was set up like you describe (are they all really set-up like that?) and sheeting was an absolute pain! Admittedly the 'traveller' was just a block running on a piece of SS wire, but I commented several times that if it were my boat I'd have to change the steering to a more normal arrangement.
Also although the Wave didn't have a tiller extension, I expect your Prindle has. Have you thought about where that goes when you tack/gybe? You could have a 'cow horn' type extension but these bring their own problems.
I can't see what your hoping to achieve, as in more than 30 years of cat sailing I can only recall one occasion when my hand got even close to being caught by the traveller car during a gybe and then it was because I was off-balance in a big sea with winds around 35mph. Your gybing routine is just something that you eventually perform without even thinking. You get used to it.
John Alani ___________ Stealth F16s GBR527 and GBR538 | | | Re: Beach Cat Steering Modification
[Re: windwardrail]
#48159 04/28/05 09:59 AM 04/28/05 09:59 AM |
Joined: Jun 2001 Posts: 12,310 South Carolina Jake
Carpal Tunnel
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Carpal Tunnel
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Posts: 12,310 South Carolina | Most of the bigger supercats are setup like you describe - with the tiller crossbar in front of the mainsheet / traveler. The problem that you run into on a normally sized boat is that you will have trouble moving the tiller extension from tack to tack without either getting stuck on something, or repetively beating your crew. The Hobie wave does not have a tiller extension or a traveler.
Jake Kohl | | | Re: Beach Cat Steering Modification
[Re: mmiller]
#48162 04/29/05 03:31 AM 04/29/05 03:31 AM |
Joined: Feb 2005 Posts: 1,382 Essex, UK Jalani
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Posts: 1,382 Essex, UK | Yes Matt, I guess that's possible. Not being familiar with the Wave I just found the whole setup bizarre and difficult to use. When I tried to sheet in the 'traveller' kept coming towards me, I could pull it almost all the way to windward before the mainsheet blocks took up and allowed the traveller back. (The traveller line was so thin it kept sliding through the clamcleat - in the end I just put a knot in it!  ) It really was no fun at all
John Alani ___________ Stealth F16s GBR527 and GBR538 | | |
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