Quite sure she’s a motor sailer.
Nice hull. No fwd visibility.
CQR anchor usually indicates a sailboat owner.
Interesting! Would love to see interior pics and his cruising style/history
May be the rest of the box is under the deck with drainage off the side of the hull.
58’ William Garden, built 1952. Single articulating fishtail rudder, twin Lugger’s 165hp each, 30” wheels. Steadiest on track boat I ever steered. Quiet, no fuss, slippery View attachment 117563
View attachment 117564
View attachment 117565
t c - Your boat has my heart!
In regard to your many experiences... How does she track in slow forward
speed, respond in reverse and handle during following seas? The first two I'm confident are muchly taken care of by alternating propeller propulsion directions and rpm. The third I believe would be somewhat automatically accommodated due to her slicing stern design. However, if a breach were to begin... that enormous articulating rudder do the trick of straightening her back up?
I respectfully ask these questions simply because I've never handled a design such as yours with twins to the sides and rudder in center. She is beautiful and was born same year as me!
Going strait, 8-9 knots, the auto pilot adjusts in very small amounts. I suspect a one degree rudder angle is accentuated by the tail flap: video of the rudder in action.'cap, how effective is the articulated rudder tab?
Twins with plenty of prop walk steer just fine in reverse. Just have to get used to ignoring the rudder(s). Leave them centered and only steer with the engines. If you want to turn, take one engine out of gear and you'll turn that direction. To turn tighter, give a kick of forward thrust on that engine and the turn will tighten.
Going strait, 8-9 knots, the auto pilot adjusts in very small amounts. I suspect a one degree rudder angle is accentuated by the tail flap: video of the rudder in action.
https://youtube.com/playlist?list=PL-pHCNJheWfSyHM_AU278Sdu13nwzIKbA
Yes, tolerance are loose probably for that reason, with no prop in front of this rudder, propwash does not effect steering. It actually one of the factors in the boat cruising so smooth, no turbulent water over the rudder ( no vibration)t c - Thanks! I see how rudder articulation mechanism works... cool! I bet that well assists for propwash to throw beam of water helping to turn boat.
I imagine so the hinge and slide bar don't get gummed up by sea growth that fairly often the rudder should be thrown full over to each side. That's a use it or loose it situation...
++++++++However, if a breach were to begin... that enormous articulating rudder do the trick of straightening her back up?+++++++++
It will if you are on the ball. When in a following rough sea and the boat does not want to straighten up even with full wheel then a STRONG shot of engine power will push a BEEG stream of water past the rudder. Use it.
I am not talking about enough throttle to pick up a bunch of speed, but a quick strong shot of throttle and then back off to your normal revs.
My boat is quite different, a lot smaller, with essentially a planing hull and a flat transom so I do get pushed. Yours should not get pushed to that degree but if you feel the boat not responding use that throttle.
That’s the sweet balance shape giving you great performance.I can steer my Willard when backing from about 1.5 to 2.4 knots. Need to hold on tight to insure the rudder dos’nt flop over. That could cause some damage. But I can accurately steer the boat.
Down swell is the least stable course.