Autopilot
Moderators: CaptPatrick, mike ohlstein, Bruce
- In Memory Walter K
- Senior Member
- Posts: 2912
- Joined: Jun 30th, '06, 21:25
- Location: East Hampton LI, NY
- Contact:
- Terry Frank
- Senior Member
- Posts: 229
- Joined: Jun 29th, '06, 15:20
- Location: Morehead City, North Carolina
- In Memory of Vicroy
- Senior Member
- Posts: 2340
- Joined: Jun 29th, '06, 09:19
- Location: Baton Rouge, LA
I put a Si-Tex SP 70 on AJ about 15 years ago when pilots were real expensive and the SP 70 was a lot cheaper. Been real happy with it, Si Tex still makes it....very stable on the flux gate compass, and it will interface with some plotters, but shoot, clicking the port/stb button now and then to keep it on the track line keeps you awake. I can attest that it lasts, and yep, it all gets shot with a lot of CX, maybe that's why it's lasted so well......used it yesterday for the first time in months, winter has been hell in coonassland, cold, rain, very few shorts & t shirt days this winter....took AJ for a ride yesterday afternoon to wash her bottom, let the 6BTAs warm up for a half hour at 1200 rpm and put her on the step at 2000 rpm, let the temps come up, then pegged them.......2650 in a heartbeat, snap your neck. Gotta love diesels.
Making a list of what needs to be done on her for the UVI 8.5, and it's a big list...got room for some of you guys, gonna be fun.
UV
Making a list of what needs to be done on her for the UVI 8.5, and it's a big list...got room for some of you guys, gonna be fun.
UV
- Brewster Minton
- Senior Member
- Posts: 1795
- Joined: Jun 30th, '06, 07:44
- Location: Hampton Bays NY
- Contact:
SP-70 here as well.
It was bought mostly for putting the lines out when trolling, purchased by my wife who was tired of hearing me yell "your crossing the lines, keep the boat straight" as the boat wandered off course and my wire lines came together.
The unit has worked real well for me and I think it was a great choice, I have it set up with two remotes on my Express, so I can make adjustments from the cockpit.
It was bought mostly for putting the lines out when trolling, purchased by my wife who was tired of hearing me yell "your crossing the lines, keep the boat straight" as the boat wandered off course and my wire lines came together.
The unit has worked real well for me and I think it was a great choice, I have it set up with two remotes on my Express, so I can make adjustments from the cockpit.
- Brewster Minton
- Senior Member
- Posts: 1795
- Joined: Jun 30th, '06, 07:44
- Location: Hampton Bays NY
- Contact:
- Hyena Love
- Senior Member
- Posts: 309
- Joined: Jun 30th, '06, 09:54
- In Memory of Vicroy
- Senior Member
- Posts: 2340
- Joined: Jun 29th, '06, 09:19
- Location: Baton Rouge, LA
Me too, the std. pump will handle you just fine. Mine worked fine with the tiny B28 style rudders and when I upgraded to Patrick's monster rudders I had to re-set the SP 70 to slow down the steering action.....takes about 20 seconds to re-set the steering rate....just don't lose the manual or you will be screwed since it's a sequence of pushing buttons.
Most autopilots, including the SP 70, have a rudder feedback device that tells the pilot black box the angle of the rudder. There are two types, the rotary that attaches to the top of the rudder stock and the linear that looks like a small hyd. ram that hooks to the steering tie bar. I used the linear since there is no room on top of the B28 style rudder stocks to attach the rotary.
UV
Most autopilots, including the SP 70, have a rudder feedback device that tells the pilot black box the angle of the rudder. There are two types, the rotary that attaches to the top of the rudder stock and the linear that looks like a small hyd. ram that hooks to the steering tie bar. I used the linear since there is no room on top of the B28 style rudder stocks to attach the rotary.
UV
- Hyena Love
- Senior Member
- Posts: 309
- Joined: Jun 30th, '06, 09:54
Quick tip...
make sure your fittings are tight before bleeding the system -or- you pick a day that is not overly hot and humid... you may also not want to clean the boat real well before hand either.
I choose not to follow those tips and picked the hottest muggiest day of the season to do this job. I ran all the hoses then proceeded to give the boat a real good cleaning so it would dry out by the time I finished bleeding the system, and then I could secure the lines and put the deck back down. Long story short I followed the process of cranking the upper helm 20 rotations to the right the lower helm 20 to the right, then hit the autopilot and the hydraulic hose came flying out of a fitting whipping around spraying fluid everwhere. Second or two later I am dripping with sweat and hydraulic fluid. The boat looked like a murder scene..red fluid covered everything.
make sure your fittings are tight before bleeding the system -or- you pick a day that is not overly hot and humid... you may also not want to clean the boat real well before hand either.
I choose not to follow those tips and picked the hottest muggiest day of the season to do this job. I ran all the hoses then proceeded to give the boat a real good cleaning so it would dry out by the time I finished bleeding the system, and then I could secure the lines and put the deck back down. Long story short I followed the process of cranking the upper helm 20 rotations to the right the lower helm 20 to the right, then hit the autopilot and the hydraulic hose came flying out of a fitting whipping around spraying fluid everwhere. Second or two later I am dripping with sweat and hydraulic fluid. The boat looked like a murder scene..red fluid covered everything.
- In Memory of Vicroy
- Senior Member
- Posts: 2340
- Joined: Jun 29th, '06, 09:19
- Location: Baton Rouge, LA
I had something similar happen on AJ...the bleeder hose between the two ends of the ram was clear vinyl....the bonehead (not me) that bled the system after he installed the a/p left the two nipple vales open, so the system was running on some flimsy clear plastic hose....of course it bit the dust 30 miles offshore in rough seas, so I made it back to Port Eads on throttle and gears, no steering. Took a while to figure out and did not have enough hyd fluid to get up the river, so put Shell Rotella T 15w40 in it, worked fine, sorta stiff but worked.
I used the nylon hyd hose for the Sea Star install originally with 3/8 fittings, worked fine, just chafe-guard the hose everywhere with some slit rubber hose and wire ties. Real easy install, just "T" the steering hoses into the pump.
UV
I used the nylon hyd hose for the Sea Star install originally with 3/8 fittings, worked fine, just chafe-guard the hose everywhere with some slit rubber hose and wire ties. Real easy install, just "T" the steering hoses into the pump.
UV
Who is online
Users browsing this forum: Bing [Bot] and 150 guests