The control heads arrived from Rg Rollin Co.and my gauge panels showed up from Seaboard marine
I will be building my pod and laying out the helm in the coming weeks. The quality of the control heads is second to none very happy not cheap but I feel worth every penny.
i believe i am a absolute expert on those controls after 20 years of ownership. there is really nothing you can explain to a person having the OEM. controls .you turn around when docking facing the stern and your natural standing with hands on your side falls on the levers.you will be able to back into any slip and miss a pole by a half inch off the corners of the transom gunwale every day of the week.
bob lico wrote: ↑Apr 26th, '21, 16:11
i believe i am a absolute expert on those controls after 20 years of ownership. there is really nothing you can explain to a person having the OEM. controls .you turn around when docking facing the stern and your natural standing with hands on your side falls on the levers.you will be able to back into any slip and miss a pole by a half inch off the corners of the transom gunwale every day of the week.
Even in a 15 kt crosswind?
Peter Schauss
Water-Lou
1978 B31 SF (BERG 1727M781-314)
Trace I did not buy my engines from Seaboard but I have bought some parts from them they are very helpful!! I wanted the Sox digital package so I can get the nema 2000 connection and put my info on the garmin.plus I added a lot of extra alarms.
While I would normally say no way you are getting in easy with a 15 knot crosswind. But one day I saw someone do it. Actually it was the yard forman at the marina. He did it using the standard controls.
15 knot cross wind if you don't have any boats sticking out past the pilings in your marina. Lay your boat up against the pilings with the stern of your boat lined up with the piling for your slip. Wrap a line around the piling and then around the stern cleat, and then put the outboard engine in reverse and in she goes.
It is a two person job, but during impossible times you take impossible measures.
yes even in a 15 mph crosswind !!! there is a huge advantage over standard controls mainly looking over your shoulder while backing into a slip compare to standing up looking backward with the handle on the levers in your hand.i always go out in 15 mph to 50mph (gale warnings) to be alone fishing for bass . i keep the engine running with the bow into the wind while the men in the cockpit cast into the bunker pods.when i get back i have to dock in tremendous winds so i put the stern on the opposite pole in the slip to the wind and ROLL the stern into the slip .once you are past the two front poles you can keep her straight between the poles with a touch of each lever and huge rudders helping you.believe me phoenix came back from the ocean many a time with a audience at the dock. the main procedure is to use the padded front poles as a pivot point and hard on the opposite engine in reverse and the boat will walk around the pole until straight in the slip.
Last edited by bob lico on Apr 28th, '21, 08:49, edited 1 time in total.