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Reverse steering?
When I returned from my recent cruise there was a boat in my slip - a
very nice Niagara 35. I helped the marina manager move it to another location and he explained that it had been purchased by a friend of another tenant, and it was just staying for a few days. Then he mentioned that it had one very odd characteristic: the steering worked in reverse! I said I had never heard of that in a boat made in the last 50 years, and we agreed that this must have been the result of some jury rig or half-assed repair. The wheel looked like the original installation, and I'm sure that Hinterhoeller would not have taken a short cut even though the rudder post being a foot aft of the wheel would have made things tight. Has anyone heard of such a rig? Have there been any production boats where the steering is reversed? Didn't this fall from favor before WWII? |
Reverse steering?
"Jeff" wrote in message ...
When I returned from my recent cruise there was a boat in my slip - a very nice Niagara 35. I helped the marina manager move it to another location and he explained that it had been purchased by a friend of another tenant, and it was just staying for a few days. Then he mentioned that it had one very odd characteristic: the steering worked in reverse! I said I had never heard of that in a boat made in the last 50 years, and we agreed that this must have been the result of some jury rig or half-assed repair. The wheel looked like the original installation, and I'm sure that Hinterhoeller would not have taken a short cut even though the rudder post being a foot aft of the wheel would have made things tight. Has anyone heard of such a rig? Have there been any production boats where the steering is reversed? Didn't this fall from favor before WWII? I sailed on a Landfall ( later Vagabond ) 39 by Ron Amy that had that as an option. It steered normally until you had following seas and then you flipped a valve and it reversed to hydraulics to the steering servo. Leanne |
Reverse steering?
"Jeff" wrote
Have there been any production boats where the steering is reversed? I have to move my tiller opposite to the direction I want the bow to go... |
Reverse steering?
"Ernest Scribbler" wrote in message . .. "Jeff" wrote Have there been any production boats where the steering is reversed? I have to move my tiller opposite to the direction I want the bow to go... I can imagine no advantage to a wheel that operates that way. A tiller is intuitive (to me, anyway); likewise is a wheel. But to turn a wheel in the opposite direction to the way I want the bow to go...I just can't see it as anything but trouble. |
Reverse steering?
KLC Lewis wrote:
"Ernest Scribbler" wrote in message . .. "Jeff" wrote Have there been any production boats where the steering is reversed? I have to move my tiller opposite to the direction I want the bow to go... I can imagine no advantage to a wheel that operates that way. A tiller is intuitive (to me, anyway); likewise is a wheel. But to turn a wheel in the opposite direction to the way I want the bow to go...I just can't see it as anything but trouble. The next time my BMW is in for a servioce, I'll get them to make this modification, and let you all know the result. This may well be my last post to this NG, so 'bye to you all! DP |
Reverse steering?
"KLC Lewis" wrote
I can imagine no advantage to a wheel that operates that way. It might make some of us less apt, in close quarters, to bang the stern into the thing we're trying to steer around. Then again, maybe not. What I'm getting at is that it's more what we're accustomed to than anything particularly natural or intuitive. I'm not in any way suggesting that there's anything at all wrong with the way ship's wheels normally work. It's just that having one that operates the other way would make a certain amount of sense in consideration of the fact that steering a boat, unlike a car, generally involves applying forces to the back of the vessel. The front end doesn't start going the way you want it to go until you get the back end behind it, if you see what I mean, so operating a reversed wheel from that perspective shouldn't require any strenuous mental contortions. Picture yourself at the helm of a pusher tug, behind a long string of barges. Which way do you, sitting there in the tug's pilothouse, travel to make the bow of that lead barge turn to port? Which way are you steering to make that happen? Does that seem intuitive, or do you have to think about it? |
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