bcarter
Silver Member
<font color="blue"> > Single engine I/O, Outboards, and Inboards all have problems docking. </font>
Outboards and I/Os are easy to dock (IMHO). You can steer the thrust and with very little practice can put the boat where you want, when you want.
An single engine inboard is much harder to dock due to the "torque steer" cause by the angle of the prop and the fact that the rudder is much less effective at low speed. (Which is not to say that you can't dock an inboard well, you just need more practice and you need to plan ahead.)
Another poster mentioned that the inboard will pull to the right.... This is only true for right hand props (or is it left hand props /forums/images/graemlins/confused.gif). The boat will pull the other way if the prop is the "other" pitch. Either way the trick is to pull up the dock on the correct side so that the torque steer from the prop as you reverse the engine to stop will snug you right up to the dock nice and smoothly.
Backing up straight requires going hard over with the rudder and pulsing the throttle in bursts to get wash over the rudder but not building up a lot of speed. Again, it takes some practice but it isn't anything you can't master...
Having the power and stability of an inboard when skiiing is well worth the time it takes to get good at controlling the board at low speeds.
My $0.03,
Outboards and I/Os are easy to dock (IMHO). You can steer the thrust and with very little practice can put the boat where you want, when you want.
An single engine inboard is much harder to dock due to the "torque steer" cause by the angle of the prop and the fact that the rudder is much less effective at low speed. (Which is not to say that you can't dock an inboard well, you just need more practice and you need to plan ahead.)
Another poster mentioned that the inboard will pull to the right.... This is only true for right hand props (or is it left hand props /forums/images/graemlins/confused.gif). The boat will pull the other way if the prop is the "other" pitch. Either way the trick is to pull up the dock on the correct side so that the torque steer from the prop as you reverse the engine to stop will snug you right up to the dock nice and smoothly.
Backing up straight requires going hard over with the rudder and pulsing the throttle in bursts to get wash over the rudder but not building up a lot of speed. Again, it takes some practice but it isn't anything you can't master...
Having the power and stability of an inboard when skiiing is well worth the time it takes to get good at controlling the board at low speeds.
My $0.03,