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![]() Charlie Morgan wrote: Does the motor mount allow the Yamaha to turn? If so, you may find it useful to use the motor in reverse to pull the stern towards the dock. If you have a high thrust model Yamaha, it will do this effectively. Yes, I can turn the engine 45 degrees to either side of mid-ships. It is the high thrust Yamaha, but most propellors do not work efficiently in reverse. Never the less, I think I can overcome the current somewhat with the engine. The current is not extremely fast (about 2 to 3 knots), but enough to get you into trouble if you don't line things up properly. Some days the current is way down and entering the slip is no problem. Somehow the engine has to stop the forward momentum of the boat, and at the same time keep the stern from swinging down stream. Maybe pointing the engine at 45 degrees upstream and giving it reverse power of the right amount and at the right time, would do the trick. I have no idea how the power boats with fixed inboards can handle this problem. Most of them appear too small to have double drive shafts that could be used to turn the boat. I have searched many books like Chapman and none of them covers a stituation where you have a forced narrow approach with a current or strong wind on the beam. If this were a situation of a dock which is open on one side, it would allow more maneuvering room to approach and/or recover. I also find it useful, when short handed, to put the emphasis on securing the boat from a midpoint, rather than the ends, initially. I simply have a dockline with the loop over a cabintop winch, which is not quite the center of the boat, but close enough. If someone can step off the boat with the other end in their hand and simple hold their ground with that line, This slip has a high pier that we access via a boarding ladder, so stepping off is not that simple. or tie it off, it will hold the boat close enough that neither the bow nor stern can get too far away. Again, I have to have a reasonable way on to enter this slip with the current flowing. This makes it extremely difficult for someone to grab a piling on the dock and manage to stop the momentum of the boat. That gives the other person time to take care of properly securing the other lines. CWM I know all you folks are trying hard to find a solution, and I appreciate the efforts. Any of us who have done extensive cruising have encountered docking problems before. My biggest challenge was taking my boat down the Mississippi River, which has currents over 6 knots, in places. Somehow I managed to keep from damaging my boat. There was the time we couldn't tie up at Cape Girardeau, Mo. on that trip because when I turned the boat around against the current, my 6 hp Sea Gull engine could not overcome the current, and we slowly drifted past the town. Sherwin |
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