******* I agree...My bow thruster is a valuable tool when backing, parallel parking, or just correcting for judgement errors when entering my slip. I have talked to people, however, who have both a stern & a bow thruster and they swear by them.Carey wrote:
I have one, and I do appreciate it when I back into a slip. I have a single engine, and limited steering in reverse at slow speeds.... I would choose a bow thruster over a stern thruster. ..
*Not trying to be picky, but thought that you would like to know this.* The factory was on the San Sesbastion River at St. Augustine, FL.* I picked up a boat there, and did the outfitting across the river.* Tidal currents run pretty strong in there.tachyon wrote:
Interesting sidenote......the original owner of our boat took delivery in the water at the factory in Ft. Lauderdale, Fl. After something like 10 miles or so the hydraulic steering failed, but he was able to return to the factory and dock perfectly fine using the bow thruster alone. Not a common failure, I know, but nevertheless having that backup get-home capability made all the difference.
Nick,
Ottawa,
Canada.
*Yep, that's my get home option when I take my single screw out on a sem-submerged container.* Bow and stern hydraulic thrusters on and I'll get home sideways.* Then the book deal......YES...jleonard wrote:
I have a hydraulid stern thruster. Installed by the previous owner.
It works well. Nice thing is it can be left on...for minutes, hours I suppose .*
*
*I've often thought that the bow thruster/articulated rudder combo would be the ideal set-up on a single screw, so hopefully you can report back on your experiences after the upcoming cruising season. (Including any that involve Scotch/Rum if you care to divulge!)tachyon wrote:
We have a bow thruster and have recently added an articulated rudder to our Mainship 390 (single engine). The combination is superb....using just the rudder hard over the boat appears to pivot in it's own length, and by using the thruster and rudder together and short bursts of throttle, I'm expecting to be able to side-slip the boat (I've actually had very limited experience with the the rudder...it was installed late last Sept.). I was originally thinking of adding a stern thruster, but the cost/complexity of the installation and maintenance/servicing issues put me off. Of course, these performance expectations have evolved during the hours spent dreaming about the boat throughout our long frigid winter, and when you throw in a decent amount of Scotch/Rum as is required to survive that season, well, anything seems possible!!