Understand one individual above is strongly against gyros but they work better than fins, fish, flapper stoppers, rolling chocks or anything else except possibly Magnus that can oscillate deployment. I’d rather have the genset on and sleep like a baby putting up with the nominal cost of this rare condition than be pissy, crappy and not be on my best game the following morning. Fatigue boating or driving is every bit as dangerous as being drunk. My genset like most is in the ER. It has its own enclosure. It doesn’t interrupt anyone’s sleep. Even its exhaust doesn’t splash.
I guess you meant me with regard to the gyros.
After talking to several producers of gyros I could only draw one conclusion and that was they are not for me. Reasons ?
1. The whole thing takes up quite a bit of space, which I don't have available. If I put it in the boat it means I won't be able to access certain parts of the boat (ER) anymore. That was a no go for me.
2. The spool up time is around 45 min and that means that, if the wind picks up suddenly (like e.g. the Meltemi does in the Med) you won't be able to get the boat stabilized. A gyro that starts up needs to be in a stable condition, otherwise it cannot determine what is the 'horizontal' position. You actually might end up with a list.
For me that was unacceptable since I want to have instantaneous stabilization when conditions change and in the Med that can happen in an instance.
3. Electricity usage of the gyros is high. First of all about 4 to 5 Kw to spool up the system and then about 2 Kw per hour to keep the gyro going in bad weather. For me that means running the generator at night while I am asleep and there cannot be a bigger no-no than running a generator when nobody is guarding it. There is no automatic shut off, there is no fail safe system and since parts in a generator can fail it is a hazard on board, which means someone has to be awake if a generator is running. So I want to run stabilizers from the batteries and that means the lowest electricity use possible. The electric fins have an anchor mode where they are slightly less sensitive and react a bit slower. That reduces the electricity usage and that means I can run them off the batteries.
4. The fourth reason is the bearings. We spend about 7 - 8 months or almost 6000 hours each year on the boat and most of it is on anchor. We would have that gyro on basically every trip and most nights when we would be in the Aegean sea. That would mean the gyro would be running about 3000 - 4000 hours each season. And the bearings have a life expectancy of about 3000 - 6000 hours. In order to change the bearings the whole gyro system needs to be taken apart and that costs a fortune. The producers of the gyro don't tell you that in their sales pitch, but when you ask a bit further they will tell you. If you only use your boat 200 hours each year it is not a problem, but when you use your boat in mostly rough waters for months at the time...............it is something to take into consideration.
Based on those 4 reasons and the fact that the cost of a gyro is not so different from other stabilizers, I decided against gyros. I fully understand the way the system works and I agree it is a good way to stabilize the boat since it will oppose any movement of the boat immediately. But that also brings in another worry that I have, of which I have not enough knowledge, but since I had already taken my decision I did not dive deeper into that subject.
The gyro is bolted to the boat in order to be able to get the boat stabilized. Unlike the stabilizer fins, which excercise their force on a reinforced hull, the gyro will create a torque effect in the hull. As a result you will get a different torque moment close to the gyro as opposed to, let's say the bow. In other words you continuously put stress on the hull in a corkscrew motion and I don't know if the boat was designed to take that force.
But ok, perhaps I am over estimating this 5th reason, but if anyone knows the answer, I would like to hear it.
Anyway, like I said, that is my choice, but I fully understand if someone else makes a different assumption or decision. I know there are loads of people who happily switch on the generator and go to sleep without anyone guarding it. A large part of my life I have been trained not to do that, for safety reasons. Maybe I am too serious, but I am former military, also a pilot, I like safety
