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On 3/18/2015 7:28 PM, Keyser Söze wrote:
On 3/18/15 6:10 PM, Tim wrote: Greg's thread made me think about my old Chris-craft Cavalier and how it was set up. It had solid shaft propulsion. And looking from the back, it had the rudder just left of the prop. I wonder why it was set that way instead of being directly behind the propeller instead of offset the way it was. Also I wonder why only one prop instead of two. It was a bugger to back out of a slip . When underway everything was fine and would steer well regardless of speed or direction. Any ideas? Offset rudder. First time I saw that was in the late 1950s. It wasn't uncommon on inboard runabouts that "wandered" into my dad's shop. I think even in larger, twin engined boats with rudders, the rudder is not necessarily dead center to the prop. It's usually offset, not by much, but is not perfectly centered. I remember this on the Egg Harbor I had. When it was being launched but still on land I was standing behind it and noticed that the rudders where not perfectly in line with the center hub of the props. They were offset by about an inch, one in one direction, the other opposite. |
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