You also need to see if a ‘dab’ of power helps the situation by making the turn tighter or if it makes it worse. Having established the propeller rotation, try going ahead with the helm hard over to starboard and then to port.
co*plete a full circle in both directions and look carefully at how they differ to see if it turns quicker one way than the other. Now see if you can co*bine this with the astern prop walk to get a nice tight three-point turn working in both ways or just one. This knowledge will aid the approach to every manoeuvre you make.
One technique that is useful in ahead gear is to use a small blip of power after engaging, as you can then squirt water directly onto the rudder and really aid turning without too much forward momentum. Lastly, if you have a bow thruster, see how powerful it is. Does it move the bow much? Does the stern go the other way and if so, by how much?
The shape of the hull plays a large part in how your boat will handle. This Cockwells Duchy 27 has a shallow but almost full-length keel, which aids directional stability in ahead but makes steering astern more difficult.
The Duchy has an easily visible shaft, which makes it easy to see that it rotates clockwise in ahead and anti-clockwise in astern. This means that it will pull the stern to port in astern gear.
If you can’t see the shaft, you can still check it when tied up by engaging astern gear and seeing which way the boat moves. Here you can see the stern has moved to port, pushing it against the pontoon.
With practice, you can go in a fairly straight line astern by using a burst of power to get the boat moving backwards, then going into neutral so the rudder can work without fighting the prop walk effect.
Try turning ahead in both directions to see which is tighter. In this case, our circle to starboard is slightly tighter than to port, aided by the propeller turning to the right in ahead and hence moving the stern to port.
When the bow thruster is used, you can see that although it moved the bow very nicely to port, it also moved the stern to starboard. That could make it hard for the crew to get a stern line ashore.
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