What is Emergency Steering System?
An emergency steering system is backup equipment and procedures to control the vessel if the primary steering fails. This might include a spare emergency tiller that fits directly on the rudder post or a drogue that provides directional control through drag.
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What it is
An emergency steering system is backup equipment and procedures to control the vessel if the primary steering fails. This might include a spare emergency tiller that fits directly on the rudder post or a drogue that provides directional control through drag. The specific solution depends on your rudder configuration and steering system type.
What it does
Emergency steering provides a means to control the boat's direction when the primary steering system fails, whether from a broken wheel, failed hydraulic system, compromised steering cables or damaged linkage. An emergency tiller gives direct mechanical control of the rudder. Drogues towed from varying positions can help maintain a course when no direct rudder control is possible. The goal is maintaining enough control to reach safety rather than perfect maneuverability.
Why it matters
Total loss of steering is a serious emergency that leaves you unable to avoid hazards, maintain course or control the boat in traffic or near shore. Without emergency steering capability, you may be forced to call for a tow or face dangerous situations near shore or in shipping lanes. Having backup steering options and knowing how to deploy them can turn a potentially catastrophic situation into a manageable problem that allows you to reach a port under your own control.
General Maintenance
Ahead of each sailing season, verify emergency steering equipment is accessible and functional. For emergency tillers, confirm it fits the rudder post and can be deployed while at sea (practice installation). Practice deploying the drogue and test that the crew knows how to implement emergency steering procedures. Review and update written procedures in your ship's emergency manual. Consider seasonal checks if you're doing offshore passages.
Common Issues
- Emergency tiller stored in inaccessible location or doesn't fit rudder post due to modifications
- Access to rudder post blocked by installed equipment, cushions, or stowage
- No written procedures or diagrams for emergency steering implementation
- Crew never practiced emergency steering in moderate conditions
- Bolts or hardware corroded making emergency tiller installation difficult
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