I know there was an old string about helm chairs and perhaps I should have just picked up there, but my question is a little different.
How much time do you really spend "driving" and actually sitting in your lower helm chair?
Im "sampling" chairs on boats under 45 feet, esp. with pilot houses. I'm mostly thinking about Stidd, Pompanette, or similar brands, mounted to the PH sole. (So, not a "bench" such as on a GB Europa)
But so far, in pilot houses...
- they don't even seem particularly well-suited to a comfortable steering position. Hunching forward to reach the wheel, my feet don't really seem to be in the right place, etc.
- it's often hard to squeeze past them even when they're empty. And I'm not a fatty...yet. Often they're back is tight up against the guest bench seat or watch bunk)
- a lot of them seem way over-thick...esp. the back. Why?
- it would seem that short runs don't really require a chair, and longer routes tend to be on AP (with a physical watch present of course). In anchoring and docking situations they frankly seem...in the way.
They do look pretty salty...but that only goes so far. I can see them working on larger yachts with "deeper" pilot house areas. So, give me an honest assessment - how much do you really sit in your lower chair?
How much time do you really spend "driving" and actually sitting in your lower helm chair?
Im "sampling" chairs on boats under 45 feet, esp. with pilot houses. I'm mostly thinking about Stidd, Pompanette, or similar brands, mounted to the PH sole. (So, not a "bench" such as on a GB Europa)
But so far, in pilot houses...
- they don't even seem particularly well-suited to a comfortable steering position. Hunching forward to reach the wheel, my feet don't really seem to be in the right place, etc.
- it's often hard to squeeze past them even when they're empty. And I'm not a fatty...yet. Often they're back is tight up against the guest bench seat or watch bunk)
- a lot of them seem way over-thick...esp. the back. Why?
- it would seem that short runs don't really require a chair, and longer routes tend to be on AP (with a physical watch present of course). In anchoring and docking situations they frankly seem...in the way.
They do look pretty salty...but that only goes so far. I can see them working on larger yachts with "deeper" pilot house areas. So, give me an honest assessment - how much do you really sit in your lower chair?