Dutchman Boom Brake

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

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Frenchy
Posts: 621
Joined: Mar 14th, '15, 15:08
Location: CD 33 "Grace"

Dutchman Boom Brake

Post by Frenchy »

After getting conked on the head by the boom last year, I'm thinking of adding a Dutchman Boom Brake and wondering
what the combined wisdom of this board is. It does add a bit of complexity, clutter and expense. But I often go out with people
new to sailing and let them steer. In a following breeze, I'm edgy. Is this a worth while addition? - Jean
Jean - 1983 CD 33 "Grace" moored in
Padanaram Harbor
Massachusetts
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tjr818
Posts: 1851
Joined: Oct 13th, '07, 13:42
Location: Previously owned 1980 CD 27 Slainte, Hull #185. NO.1257949

Re: Dutchman Boom Brake

Post by tjr818 »

That is the exact reason that we had our sailmaker raise the clew of our main by 10". There no appreciable loss of sail area and the back end of the boom is now safely above all heads. Something else to consider and there is no added clutter.
Tim
Nonsuch 26 Ultra,
Previously, Sláinte a CD27
Paul D.
Posts: 1273
Joined: Feb 6th, '05, 20:52
Location: CD 33 Femme du Nord, Lake Superior

Re: Dutchman Boom Brake

Post by Paul D. »

No experience with the Boom Brake, but I have seen them and heard they work well. Perhaps you could try first rigging a simple preventer and seeing if that works for you.

For downwind work on Femme, I have a 3/8 line at the ready to bend on to the furthest aft boom bail. I'll run that outside everything to a snatch block made fast to a bow cleat and back to the cockpit. I sometimes just run it through the cleat center hole. The boom stays put. Sometimes, in rolling but not serious sea conditions, I'll just run the line to the block fastened more midships on the rail and that holds the boom down more like a vang.
Paul
CDSOA Member
Jim Walsh
Posts: 3366
Joined: Dec 18th, '07, 13:04
Location: CD31 "ORION" Hull #27 Noank, Ct.

Re: Dutchman Boom Brake

Post by Jim Walsh »

I don't use a boom brake and I was unfamiliar with the Dutchman so I checked it out online. The only brake I've seen demonstrated in use was the Wichard Gyb'easy. That unit seems to work well and has no working parts to fail.

https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=dcYwwinFO4U
Jim Walsh

Ex Vice Commodore
Ex Captain-Northeast Fleet

CD31 ORION

The currency of life is not money, it's time
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Frenchy
Posts: 621
Joined: Mar 14th, '15, 15:08
Location: CD 33 "Grace"

Re: Dutchman Boom Brake

Post by Frenchy »

Thanks everyone, for your thoughts. I've decided to try the Dutchman, though it adds some clutter. A simple
preventer is a great idea for long distance sailing but I'd prefer something automatic where you don't have to go forward every time you change course. For my kind of coastal sailing where there are non-sailing guests sometimes helming the
boat, it makes sense, I think.
Another thing I like is that the Dutchman can be cinched down to act much like a vang and a preventer
too, with the added benefit that if the main was backwinded, there is some "give". The boom and the
deck padeye (mounted near the toerail) wouldn't see the same potential tearing-out force present if there were a rigid connection between the two. A convential vang puts a lot of compressive force on the gooseneck, too- another
thing I can eliminate.
I'm going to mount the Dutchman with heavy snap shackles at all attachment points so it can be removed
easily. Hopefully, it'll be a plus, despite the clutter and expense. Unfortunately, no decision is without its pluses and minuses. -
Jean
Jean - 1983 CD 33 "Grace" moored in
Padanaram Harbor
Massachusetts
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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

Re: Dutchman Boom Brake

Post by Joe Myerson »

Jean-Pierre,
It sounds like you've already made your decision--and I think it's a good one.

While I do not have a boom brake on my 25D, George Van Drasek had installed a Dutchman on his CD33 Isabelle before she sailed to Bermuda and back. It worked very well and, if I remember correctly, seemed to be pretty much failure-proof.

Oh, I don't think we ever needed it to prevent a flying gybe, but it did still make tacking to windward easier and less scary.

Good luck,

--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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