I always reckon you can steer with a boat out of gear going forward - just 
about. (Depending on the boat and the conditions.) But often you have to put it 
in gear and give it a kick in the right direction. Steering like this or in 
tick over depends very much on conditions. If the wind is blowing, running a 
boat slowly past moored boats and keeping it right on line gets difficult - 
especially if the wind is behind and across. In such situations the moored 
boats are being rattled about anyway so we think more power to give us better 
steerage is OK.
 
 To this end, if we are moored and see a boat approaching being blown around 
with the prop wash showing slow we go out an suggest they give it a bit of 
welly. Of course we only do this with hire boats and shares as we have found 
that many private boaters do not like being offered another option - no matter 
how much/little experience they have.
 
    

--- On Wed, 8/13/08, tony bowyer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote:

From: tony bowyer <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
Subject: [canals-list] Fast Tickover on trad engined boats - was Martin's red 
'kerchief
To: [email protected]
Date: Wednesday, August 13, 2008, 1:01 AM






This theme touches one of my longstanding concerns - I have the pleasure of
'driving' an old Northwich when I get the time. She has a Lister 'H' 2
cylinder ?2litre? air-cooled engine which starts first kick in all
temperatures. However, whenever I suggest to those that run the boat we
turn down the tickover to help maintain control when slowing down for bridge
holes, blind corners, locks, turns and the like, I get head shaking but no
clear answer as to why I appear to be asking the wrong question. As a
trained scientist this perplexes me and I need to understand this better -
especially as I have driven another Listered Northwich which used to imitate
an old steam engine burning bad coal if the the throttle was reduced enough
and would eventually stall if you didn't open her up a bit..

Even in a heavy ?30 tons trad boat, it's hard to keep a line or make a
correction when in neutral, and I have ended up in trouble as a result of
going too fast at tick-over, even tho' I have developed the technique of
slowing early, going in and out of gear to gain steerage only as needed,
etc.

Any comments, advice will be gratefully received, as it bothers me that I
don't feel more in control. - a bit like driving a classic sports car like
the Morgan as I did today for the first time in 40 years!!

Tony

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