Re: [Paddlewise] Seat Adjustment

From: <JCMARTIN43_at_aol.com>
Date: Wed, 7 Oct 1998 11:19:26 EDT
In a message dated 98-10-07 07:40:59 EDT, John Winters <735769_at_ican.net>
writes:

<< To find out how much change there will be ask your boat builder how much
 moment is required to change the trim one inch. For an average male moving
 the upper torso two inches should only produce about 15 - 20 foot pounds of
 moment. Typical sea kayaks will need about 70 - 80 foot pounds to alter the
 trim one inch. My experience is that this makes little difference except
 when surfing. >>

I'm not even <thinking> of challenging John on matters-hydraulic, but when it
comes to matters-visual, I recently watched a paddler in a Mariner reach down
into the cockpit to slide his seat forward and aft and noted some significant
hull attitude change --- and hull shape, too.  ("Significant" appeared to be
more than an inch or two.)  What am I missing here?  That seat can't slide
more than a few inches either side of "neutral" --- wherever that is --- but
the hull definitely moved in concert, and moved enough to be noticable
visually and, for the paddler, presented a fairly significant set of
performance parameter changes.

On a personal basis, I'm planning to build a CLC North Bay over the winter,
and would really like to know if I have more freedom in the longtitudinal
placement of the seat pan than I thought I did.

Jack Martin
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Received on Wed Oct 07 1998 - 08:23:13 PDT

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