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Our e-tiller is a piece of iron tubing that fits on top of the ruffer post
that is capped off on the stern...if you had to, you could fit another pipe into it to extend it, but you'd have to take the wheel off to make room....I suppose we should try it once to see if it works (or how hard it works) but I think we'll wait until the bad thing hits and we're forced to use it...BTW...we have an aft cabin boat and it's not in the aft cabin.... "DSK" wrote in message . .. John Cairns wrote: Trying to remember the model of boat, but the emergency tiller was steered from the aft cabin!!!! The O'Day 37 and Whitby 42 are like that... probably true of many aft-cabin boats. Emergency steering is a sore point on many boats. The emergency tiller is difficult to connect, the connection is not as strong as it should be (especially considering that it will most likely be used under strenuous conditions), the tiller too short without enough mechanical advantage (ditto parenthetical note above), and obstructions in the cockpit prevent the emergency tiller from being swung thru a proper arc for steering. For most boats, the emergency steering is a poor afterthought. Serious racers are somewhat better in that regard, it's a requirement for ORC Cat 1 & 2... wouldn't it be cool to require one race out of a major series be held with all boats using emergency steering? It'd be an eye-opener I bet. Fresh Breezes- Doug King |
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