Fletcher500
Guru
How so?
How not?
How so?
As an aside, I wouldn't see how an autopilot is even necessary for this type of cruising. Taking 2-3 hours stints at the wheel isn't very strenuous.
Says he who has not done a lot of coastal cruising with an autopilot...??? After 40K nm coastal cruising, the AP is a vital piece of gear. I can count on fingers the times in the past 10 yrs of cruising that the boat was underway without the AP being active. There was the time that the course computer (AP brain) stroked out, hand steering for two weeks... I don't think you'll find too many coastal cruisers who would be willing to part with their AP.
Jimi, sounds like you are making that judgement based on never having one on your boat.
I’m heading out tomorrow evening for a 15 hour overnight run. I would make do, but would not be happy if my AP stopped working.
Some of you guys read these threads with your eyes half closed.
My original comment from #51 was that for typical cruising times of 6-8 hours in 2-3 hour shifts, that an AP wouldn't even be needed. Nice and simple comment. Where in the world did I say cruising thousands of miles or days at a time would be preferred without one???
35 days from Sarasota to Corpus Christi without an autopilot and never once did I think an autopilot would be nice. In fact, an autopilot is not a vital piece of my 40 years of boating. I only had one on one boat and it never worked and I didnt see the value of fixing it.
Some of you guys read these threads with your eyes half closed.
My original comment from #51 was that for typical cruising times of 6-8 hours in 2-3 hour shifts, that an AP wouldn't even be needed. Nice and simple comment. Where in the world did I say cruising thousands of miles or days at a time would be preferred without one???
Let's see....those for APs, those against.
Not hard to figure out.
If a couple, doing passage's with watch keeping, who steers the boat while you step away for a toilet break and do the every 20 minute walk around and hourly walk around the ER check?
As an aside, I wouldn't see how an autopilot is even necessary for this type of cruising. Taking 2-3 hours stints at the wheel isn't very strenuous.
Agreed, which is why I go outside whenever possible instead of traveling the ICW. Constantly adjusting the wheel for wind, current, etc. is actually distracting from what else is going on around the boat. I consider autopilot a mandatory safety device, though if I used it on the ICW I would still be aground.
OK, we all come to these threads with our own experiences.
Some come with near nothing, some come with decades of serious cruising. Some come with only recreational experience, some come with a lot of commercial time piled on.
Some even come with huge amounts of training on to of everything adding to their data base of what thousands of their students add.
Nope, ....not all posts are equal
So why should we value your opinion on something you admit you are completely unfamiliar with and have, in fact, never used? All you bring to the discussion is an unfounded opinion based upon nothing in your personal experience. How is this helpful?
Ya'll would hate travelling with me then...
Summertime moves mean underway at 0530 and stopping no earlier than 2000. That usually gives me about 14-15 hours moving at 8 knots. I have done 120nm in the same day though. Up before the sun and stopping after the sunset.
When offshore the autopilot is running the show though.