What do you do with the tiller at the end of the day???

Discussions about Cape Dory, Intrepid and Robinhood sailboats and how we use them. Got questions? Have answers? Provide them here.

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MoJac
Posts: 7
Joined: Aug 6th, '08, 10:18
Location: CD25 "MoJac"
#712
Salem, MA

What do you do with the tiller at the end of the day???

Post by MoJac »

Well all is well in the world as MoJac my CD25 is back in her natural environment and swinging happily at the mooring.

As I started to button things up at the end of the day on Fri I noticed some excessive wear (obviously from last year) on my tiller cover. This, I am sure, is from where I tie off the tiller when I leave the boat. This got me to thinking (always a dangerous activity) what do other owners with tillers do at the end of the day?

- Leave the tiller (and therefore the rudder loose to flop back and forth)? Or,

- Tie it off, up vertical, down horizontal and if so How and to what.

As always pics are the best.
Greg
s/v "MoJac"
Cape Dory 25 #712
Salem, MA
Steve Darwin
Posts: 179
Joined: Jul 2nd, '05, 19:48
Location: CD 25D "Arabella" Fairhaven, Mass

Post by Steve Darwin »

Vertical, lashed to the main sheet, which, on the 25D, arises from the traveler just aft of the tiller.
Steve Darwin
CD 25D "Arabella"
Fairhaven, Mass
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Markst95
Posts: 628
Joined: Aug 5th, '08, 10:04
Location: 1972 Typhoon Weekender "SWIFT" Hull #289 Narragansett Bay, RI

Post by Markst95 »

Horizontal, bungeed to the jib sheet cleats.
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jbenagh
Posts: 868
Joined: Sep 15th, '07, 21:02
Location: CD30 "Christine C"
Salem, MA

horizontal

Post by jbenagh »

horizontal and lashed to the jib sheet cleats. I don't have a cover so I touch up the varnish every year.

Jeff
Jay B.
Posts: 60
Joined: Jun 23rd, '09, 16:04
Location: Cape Dory 25 s/v little Ebby Rose Haven, MD. (sadly sold)

Tiller

Post by Jay B. »

Another vote for horizontal lashed to the jib sheet cleats.
CDSOA Member Number 1252
Jack Carr
Posts: 67
Joined: Sep 14th, '05, 09:51
Location: CD 22D, Dickens, Biddeford Pool, ME

Tiller tie down

Post by Jack Carr »

As I use my jib sheet cleats for the sheet lines to secure the rolling reefer from movement at anchor due to high winds, I have a small 1/2 clasp secured to the teak cowling and run a light line horizonal from port to starboard and attached to the tiller.
Jack
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Joe Myerson
Posts: 2216
Joined: Feb 6th, '05, 11:22
Location: s/v Creme Brulee, CD 25D, Hull #80, Squeteague Harbor, MA

Vertical, tied off to the pushpit

Post by Joe Myerson »

I put my tiller in the vertical position and tie it off, with a clove hitch. Sometimes I tie it off to the stern cleats and, more often, I tie it off to the pushpit.

This is the first full season that I'm using a tiller cover--thanks to Fran Trapp--but I'm not sure how the canvass will stand up to being tied with a clove hitch.

--Joe
Former Commodore, CDSOA
Former Captain, Northeast Fleet
S/V Crème Brûlée, CD 25D, Hull # 80

"What a greate matter it is to saile a shyppe or goe to sea."
--Capt. John Smith, 1627
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Sea Hunt
Posts: 1310
Joined: Jan 29th, '06, 23:14
Location: Former caretaker of 1977 Cape Dory Typhoon Weekender (Hull #1400) "S/V Tadpole"

Post by Sea Hunt »

Tiller cover; vertical; tied with clove hitch to stern cleats port and starboard.
Fair winds,

Robert

Sea Hunt a/k/a "The Tadpole Sailor"
CDSOA #1097
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Ray Garcia
Posts: 258
Joined: Apr 27th, '05, 22:08
Location: 1981 CD27 #212 "Spirit" Huntington, NY
Contact:

Post by Ray Garcia »

Tiller cover; vertical; velcro strapped to coiled mainsheet hanging from boom bail. Yes--sounds complicated, but I like the velcro strap.
Kilgore
Posts: 154
Joined: Aug 11th, '09, 15:24
Location: CD25 #796 "Izabela"
Sea Cliff, NY
Member #1209

Post by Kilgore »

Steve Darwin wrote:Vertical, lashed to the main sheet, which, on the 25D, arises from the traveler just aft of the tiller.
This.
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barfwinkle
Posts: 2169
Joined: Feb 6th, '05, 10:34
Location: S/V Rhapsody CD25D

Post by barfwinkle »

Steve Darwin wrote:
Vertical, lashed to the main sheet, which, on the 25D, arises from the traveler just aft of the tiller.
Same on S/V Rhapsody only with a cover.....
Bill Member #250.
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Ron Churgin
Posts: 184
Joined: Jul 30th, '07, 10:56
Location: "Courtship" Allied Princess Cutter,Oceanside, NY

Post by Ron Churgin »

I just let mine swing free, vertically.

Now you all have me worried. Is there a reason to lash down the tiller? I am at a dock so am not swinging around a mooring.
Ron Churgin
marv brinn
Posts: 202
Joined: May 13th, '05, 09:43
Location: CD 27 1982

tiller

Post by marv brinn »

I tilt the tiller up and then use the mainsheet crisscrossed over it to keep it in place. it works great
none
mattlydon
Posts: 207
Joined: Jun 18th, '08, 23:22
Location: '75 CD28 - Nyack, NY

vertical

Post by mattlydon »

CD 28 - I leave the tiller vertical, and have a small loop of light line which is knotted to the backstay. I flip this loop (about 10-12" long) over the tiller to prevent it from falling to the horizontal position and potentially bashing around the cockpit in a blow.

I then take the main sheet, which is cleated behind the tiller, coil the free line, and drop it over the tiller.

The loop keeps the line off the cockpit sole, everything's tidy, and I'm not stressing anything out.

I AM adding wear to the rudder shaft 'bushing', but you can't have everything.
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Joe Myerson
Posts: 2216
Joined: Feb 6th, '05, 11:22
Location: s/v Creme Brulee, CD 25D, Hull #80, Squeteague Harbor, MA

Addendum

Post by Joe Myerson »

I should have added that my 25D has mid-boom sheeting, thanks to the PO before the PO. That's why I tie my tiller to the pushpit, or use the aft cleats.

I've also experimented with a piece of light line to the backstay, but I think it was too light. I didn't like the way the rudder moved. It sounds like Ray's idea of a Velcro strip might be a better solution, and if I were enterprising (which I'm not), I could even sew it into the tiller cover.

--Joe
Former Commodore, CDSOA
Former Captain, Northeast Fleet
S/V Crème Brûlée, CD 25D, Hull # 80

"What a greate matter it is to saile a shyppe or goe to sea."
--Capt. John Smith, 1627
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