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![]() "Bob" wrote in message ... Either way, a dead give-a-way is the constant helm corrections. somthing aint right. Bob What ain't right is your absurd assumptions about the constant helm corrections. There is no modern, high performance sailboat with fin keel/spade rudder combo that doesn't need constant helm corrections when running with the seas on or abaft the quarter. It's the nature of the beast. Duh! If there is anything physically wrong with that boat it's the gear ratio of the wheel and the wheel itself. It needs to be rotated way too far to effect any sort of meaningful course change. That broach would not have happened with a tiller-steered vessel. A helmsman sitting sideways in the boat doesn't have his back to weather like that fool has and a tiller moves the rudder a significant amount instantaneously with great feedback. Now, this brings up the even greater folly of a pilot house where the helmsman is even more isolated from the elements. Get back to basics for safe and successful sailing. Haven't any of you learned anything from the unnecessary loss of the "Red Cloud?" Wilbur Hubbard |
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