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Date Posted: - Thursday - 06/29/06 - 3:05pm
Author: Randall
Author Host/IP: 64-161-221-132.opentable.com / 64.161.221.132
Subject: Gotcha!
In reply to: Bill Kranidis 's message, "Lee Helm in "strong winds"" on - Wednesday - 06/28/06 - 7:12pm

I'll have to try that. I must admit I've not noticed much lee helm when close hauled, but then we don't get very strong winds here in San Francisco Bay. hee hee :)

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Replies:

[> [> [> [> [> [> [> Lee helm? -- Will Holoman, - Thursday - 06/29/06 - 7:34pm (host2.brwncald.com/65.198.3.2)

My wheel has a brass cap on the handle that points upward when the rudder is straight. As the wind pipes up, I have to compensate for the mizzen by turning the brass cap toward the downwind side of the boat (port on a starboard tack). Is this lee or weather helm?

I know it's time to reef (or douse) when the cap points straight down.

[Edit]

[> [> [> [> [> [> [> [> lee vs weather -- Randall, - Thursday - 06/29/06 - 8:40pm (c-69-181-46-182.hsd1.ca.comcast.net/69.181.46.182)

Think of it this way. On a close reach, if the bow wants to go into the wind (to weather) and you need to employ helm to correct this, that correction is weather helm. Conversely, if the bow tends to move off with the wind, and you need to employ helm to correct it, that's lee helm.

My guess is the term originated when tillers were the rule. So, if you have to pull the tiller to windward to keep your course, it's weather helm; to leeward, it's lee helm.

What you describe above is weather helm.

(It's confusing.)

RR

[Edit]




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