View Single Post
  #16  
Old April 8th, 2005, 08:56 PM
Tim J.
external usenet poster
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Stan Gula wrote:
riverman wrote:
Hey, a thread with my name on it!

Yeah, you can replace the center THWART with a seat. But as others
have noted, you actualy don't want to be in the exact center of the
canoe when you paddle, as the boat will tend to pivot rather than
move forward when you stroke. Unfortunately, the center thwart DOES
want to be in the exact center, so replacing it with a seat is at
cross-purposes. For this reason, the middle thwart seat in 3-seat
canoes is actually for a third person, not a solo paddler. Even
traditional kayakers sit a little behind the midpoint.


Well, a lot of that is not necessarily so. My canoe is primarily a
solo and has the main seat very near the center. I have no trouble
keeping it on a straight track and have difficulty taking a sharp
turn without heeling it over (due to the hull shape). There are a
bow and stern seat but the hull is too narrow for big people to use
them comfortably for a long time (they were perfect for my kids
though). Whether of not a canoe pivots is as much a factor of the
paddle stroke, the amount of keel, the amount of rocker, and whether
you have the boat heeled over (assuming you have little or no
rocker). If the seat is far off the center point the boat will tend
to pivot more because you are lifting the bow (or stern) out of the
water so you have less drag at that end. I've seen Timmaay do that
many times. Especially the time he had his anchor outg.


Did I mention this was my first canoe?
--
TL,
Tim
------------------------
http://css.sbcma.com/timj