How many turns in your wheel?
Fair weather sailor that I am, only recently I was faced with a fresh breeze against a 5 knot tide for about 4 hours, including coming up the channel in Lowestoft (Suffolk, UK). It was a rather exhausting afternoon. The wheel felt very heavy, and keeping the sails in good trim demanded full focus and reaction time measured in seconds.
Now, I only have one and one-half turns of the wheel between full rudders. I don't know if this is "normal" in a F30 CK. Never asked myself the question. But one of the crew on board then remarked it was too little, and suggested I should consider changing the gear ratio at the base of the pedestal, or installing a hydraulic dampener on the link to the tiller lever.
I don't know what mechanism is there at the base of the pedestal. Presumably a radial arm drive of some description, but seems to me unlikely I can change the gear ratio on it without replacing the whole thing.
Anyone with experience of having done this, or whom suffered the same heavy wheel problem, I would much appreciate your input.
Many Thanks
Rafa
how many turns in your wheel?
how many turns in your wheel?
Rafael
s/v Nausikaa
SSR 30570, sail GBR 4619L
F30 CK (Hoyt), wishbones, centreboard, G10 rig. Built by Fairways Marine, Humble, UK, '82
Beta 16 hp with two-blade prop
s/v Nausikaa
SSR 30570, sail GBR 4619L
F30 CK (Hoyt), wishbones, centreboard, G10 rig. Built by Fairways Marine, Humble, UK, '82
Beta 16 hp with two-blade prop
Re: how many turns in your wheel?
One and one-half turns sounds about right. 5 knot current is significant. A fresh breeze against you coupled with the current makes boat handling challenging. Having more turns in the wheel stop-to-stop will only add to tiring out your poor shoulder. The heaviness you feel is the current and wind exerting pressure on the rudder as water pushes past it forcefully. In that situation the quicker you adjust the helm ( aggressive handling the helm) to keep course the better the boat will handle. Once the boat is allowed to sliddle off a bit, getting her helm back up will exert a noticeable force. Make sense? IMHO
I must say the the Freedom handles way better than my old Sabre 34 - she had a strict IOR hull and quartering seas in a breeze downwind would push her around alarmingly if you weren't extremely aggressive on the wheel immediately when feeling her being shoved off course. Steering was "easy" if aggressive and very very heavy if the boat was allowed to start fish-tailing. The AP could not handle those conditions.
Btw - f35 p rudder amidships to stop less than 3/4 turn
I must say the the Freedom handles way better than my old Sabre 34 - she had a strict IOR hull and quartering seas in a breeze downwind would push her around alarmingly if you weren't extremely aggressive on the wheel immediately when feeling her being shoved off course. Steering was "easy" if aggressive and very very heavy if the boat was allowed to start fish-tailing. The AP could not handle those conditions.
Btw - f35 p rudder amidships to stop less than 3/4 turn
Last edited by Camino on Wed Oct 04, 2017 4:29 pm, edited 1 time in total.
Re: how many turns in your wheel?
1.5 turns from stop to stop sounds low. It may be as simple as changing a sprocket to change that. Some info on steering here http://www.edsonmarine.com/support/PDFs ... gGuide.pdf
Edson still had the file on the F40 CC and were helpful answering questions.
Erik
Edson still had the file on the F40 CC and were helpful answering questions.
Erik
Re: how many turns in your wheel?
I believe that all the F30 CK boats have Whitlock Cobra steering. The ratio between wheel rotation and rudder lever movement is fixed. There should be no reason to want to alter it.
I commonly have to beat against a 4-5 kt current (but only for a short distance) and the helm is not stiff or heavy. Heaviness is either due to rig balance not being right, giving excessive weather helm, or to mechanical problems in the linkages. Heeling will, of course, also give you some weather helm. If the helm is not heavy otherwise then it is unlikely to be a mechanical problem.
It's not clear from your description what your point of sailing was. The great joy of the Freedom CK rig is that beating up a channel is easy (although very slow against a 5 kt tide!). It doesn't need any sail trimming once the sails are set up for close-hauled. My wife no longer gets grumpy if I insist on tacking up the Exe because she no longer has to do any winch-grinding.
I commonly have to beat against a 4-5 kt current (but only for a short distance) and the helm is not stiff or heavy. Heaviness is either due to rig balance not being right, giving excessive weather helm, or to mechanical problems in the linkages. Heeling will, of course, also give you some weather helm. If the helm is not heavy otherwise then it is unlikely to be a mechanical problem.
It's not clear from your description what your point of sailing was. The great joy of the Freedom CK rig is that beating up a channel is easy (although very slow against a 5 kt tide!). It doesn't need any sail trimming once the sails are set up for close-hauled. My wife no longer gets grumpy if I insist on tacking up the Exe because she no longer has to do any winch-grinding.
Sold for health reasons
Re: how many turns in your wheel?
Following on - I hadn't been able to go out to the boat after you posted your question until a couple of days ago. Mine is just a shade over 1.5 turns stop to stop.
Sold for health reasons
Re: how many turns in your wheel?
Having finally managed to undo/drill out the bolts holding my pedestal in place, I find I believed wrong. I knew my pedestal was a replacement, but the original was secured by six bolts, not four, so it was not a Whitlock pedestal.andygc wrote:I believe that all the F30 CK boats have Whitlock Cobra steering. The ratio between wheel rotation and rudder lever movement is fixed. There should be no reason to want to alter it.
Sold for health reasons