Ugh, First off,
My neighbor that owns the Catalina 38 in the harbor also owns a company that specializes in sound proofing and he is going to work out the specifications for making the AP silent but I needed to get some cavity data for him so I went under cockpit with a tape and i sort of started studying the whole steering system. The arms that extend from the rudder shaft seem long enough to simulate a "tiller", but when I move the rudders with my hands from under there it just seems like the whole thing is harder to control from that long 'bar' than it is from the wheelhouse, (I guess the correct term is "tie rod" and "pedestal").
Anyways, I was just imagining me as an auto pilot trying to steer the boat from under there by moving that tie rod around and i found it to be rather hard to be really accurate. It's hard to stop at an exact spot without over-steering just a teeny bit, It's like when I get the rudders moving they don't want to stop - it takes force to stop the rudders from moving after I get them going?
Am I making any sense??
I dunno
So that hydraulic piston thing is pretty strong, right? I imagine the force needed to throw those rudders around at 6 knots and i guess i got a little worried. I'm tempted to connect the hydraulic piston thing directly to one of the tiller arms instead of that "tie rod" thing because the tie rod just does not have a good feel in my hand to me when I try to quickly move it from side to side - and I think it could bend too if I do it from the middle, like it will put "spring" into the system? Am I just being too anal again?? This always happens when I engineer something, I get really anal. You think I'm just being stoopid?

