Don,
Yeah, that will be fine I would expect. The situation that is intolerable in my mind (from personal..scary experience) is the guy that has his fascination with sailings past (not a bad thing in itself), and tries to repeat the past by using a kerosene lamp on the foretriangle or off the backstay over the cockpit. Because it is "traditional", it is good in this persons mind. But they are fooling themselves badly.
A usual kerosene lamp does not have the necessary lumen output to be seen 2 miles away, yet the boats owner goes to sleep in blissful ignorance of the danger he could in or causing.
In my case we missed T-boning a guy anchored, using a kerosene lamp hung 6 ft. above the cockpit, by a mere 15 ft. The lamp *was* seen, but was so yellow, and so dim as to be confused with the dying embers of a shoreline campfire, which there were several of. The loom of our running lights reflected off the hull, and I did a very quick 90deg. turn to avoid him. the next morning I rowed over and related this story to him..and he gulped a few times. Knowing his stubborness, I suspect he is still using the kerosene light.
In response to this situation, I added 3M silver colored reflective tape p[ieces to the stanchions, the mast and boom, so when hit with light at night, my boat lites up like a christmas tree. During the day, the silver colored tape blends into the S.S. stanchions perfectly. Now we can be seen by late night arrivals, as well as 'see the boat' when we are rowing back from visiting other boats, and using a flashlight to pick out which hull out of 30 out there, is ours?
This stuff is available in hardware stores for a couple dollars and is well worth applying.
Cheers,
Larry DeMers
s/v DeLaMer
Cape Dory 30
Don Carr wrote: Larry; I use a guest battery powered light which rides on the forestay and is reasonably free swinging so the occlusion you speak of is normally only momentary on any given point of the compass. Plus the added motion of it swinging in my mind is actually as good or better than a fixed lantern.
FWIW
demers@sgi.com