Home |
Search |
Today's Posts |
#16
![]() |
|||
|
|||
![]()
The proper setup for the line overboard is to have it release the autopilot and
head the boat into the wind. Of course, this is easier to imagine that with an old mechanical self steering rig, not a modern autohelm. And a CD 36 is rather hard to coax off its course. Many years ago we took turns being dragged behind a 40 footer doing about 6 knots - I can't imagine being able to pull back to the boat against in that situation. wrote in message ... On Wed, 30 Jun 2004 21:59:54 +1000, OzOne wrote: On Wed, 30 Jun 2004 07:34:34 -0400, Martin Baxter scribbled thusly: wrote: O Highly unlikely that you were able to grab a 15 foot line at that speed, much less hang on and pull yourself back to the boat. By the time you hit the water and spun, the line was already gone. BB Bingo! BB wins the cupie doll! Anybody here ever tried this trick? Even if you do it on purpose, just to see, it's pretty much impossible even with a 25 foot line. Before anyone hangs a line of their stern and thinks that this is a substitute for proper seamanship they should try it, with someone still on the boat to drive of course, your illusions of safety will be quickly evaporated. Cheers Marty We have to assume that in this case the line was caught and held...make it 100' long if you wish. The facts were given as a 15 foot line. You can't assume it to be anything else, anymore than you can assume it all happened on dry land with a boat that was not moving. Just for fun, drag a 200 foot rope behind a boat that is traveling at 4.5 knots. Make it a 500 foot rope if you prefer. Jump overboard and grab it while in the water. Then see if you can pull yourself back to the boat. You can't. Jack LaLanne in his prime couldn't do it. Neither could Buster Crabb, Mike Tyson or Ahnold the Barbarian. Ain't gonna happen. BB |