BrianG
Senior Member
As they say: "There's many a slip twixt the cup and the lip"
I hope the ## ribs were not from a docking gone wrong.
Your humor and idiom feel misplaced. Broken ribs are not fun and you are not funny.
As they say: "There's many a slip twixt the cup and the lip"
I hope the ## ribs were not from a docking gone wrong.
This is exactly what I suggested several times above, in post #35 & #42. Some times I wonder if I type in invisible ink..?
If prop walk is the wrong way and the wind direction just off....it may not be possible to get the bow around enough and you will just willow leaf back down the fairway. Thats why I almost always just keep backing out.
Good tips on maximizing prop walk.
Yet some conditions will eventually exceed nearly every single engine boats turning capability if it has no thruster and there is limited turning room. Then skipper's experience and ability also factor in (often the greater limiter).
I have seen some of the best boathandlers try maneuvers that I knew exceeded my comfort level...only to occasionally do major damage when this didn't go their way.
I've also found that when powering the bow through the wind is a challenge or there's limited room to swing the stern downwind, it's sometimes more effective to get moving backwards, then apply a handful of forward throttle with full rudder to snap the bow around.
Of course, every boat responds differently to some of those methods.
Again my suggestion to anyone having trouble with their slip assignment is...
Spend the money for thrusters.
Spend the money on good instruction.
Get good dock8ng or get another slip.
I have seen too many people give up boating or become slip condos because leaving the slip is traumatic or too much effort.
When using prop walk to your advantage, remember that it's almost always stronger when you put the engine in gear opposite your direction of movement. So if you're moving forward and go for reverse, you'll feel the prop walk more than when backing continuously.
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Run engine(s) until warm. Want to see good oil pressure, exhaust and cooling.
Surprising how many people don't do this.
Yes, I've seen people do the dink as tugboat thing with great results. Seems to be the ultimate cheat. Not only the gasoline powered thrusting, but the two articulating grabber arms with opposable thumbs controlled by a CPU engineered to respond to voice command and lastly, the ability of the Dink to serve as a fender of last resort.In such conditions we’ve resorted to launching the dinghy and using that to help. Last boat was shown in several boat shows when new to defray purchase. With two experienced masters and myself we could not get her in her assigned spot. Even resorted to doubling dock lines and throwing them to folks on the docks to no avail. Left Newport and went back into East passage.launched dinghy with two aboard and one at helm. Needed no outside assistance to get her where she needed to be. Your thruster is 8-12hp and if electric only useable in bursts. You dinghy is 9.9-25hp and can be used continuously but also positioned wherever you want. Huge advantage to the dinghy. Also can use dinghy to convey lines to cleats and use pull around a cleat to move a boat. Dinghy can pull and push. Since that experience if I can have 3 aboard(even if it means ferrying one back to shore) will use the dinghy when in extremis.
I have a 28hp diesel, I let it warm to operating temp at high idle. Takes about 15 minutes. Plenty of prep to do on the boat before shoving off that easily consumes that 15 minutes.I don't wait for full warmup even with my gassers, but with any engine I go for a good 3 minutes or so of runtime before leaving the dock. Usually run at high idle for a couple minutes, while unplugging power, removing extra dock lines, etc. Then idle back, confirm stable idle, remove remaining lines and go.
I have a 28hp diesel, I let it warm to operating temp at high idle. Takes about 15 minutes. Plenty of prep to do on the boat before shoving off that easily consumes that 15 minutes.
I have a 28hp diesel, I let it warm to operating temp at high idle. Takes about 15 minutes. Plenty of prep to do on the boat before shoving off that easily consumes that 15 minutes.
I worked for an agency that had a fleet of several hundred diesel trucks. The factory engineers always said engines last longer and run better and more reliably if you wait until they're warm before placing a load on them. Our fleet was mainly Cummins and Detroits. 8-71s and a comaparable Cummins, cannot remember which model. So I've always gone with that.My engines warm up faster than that, but I've never seen a reason to waste the fuel, noise, engine wear, etc for a warmup that long. Generally once the temp is starting to come up and it idles fine, it's fine to take some load and it'll be warm pretty quickly once I'm moving.
For my engines, they're usually showing around 120-140 by the time I leave the dock. They'll warm up to about 165 at the dock if they run long enough.