Sfat rapid de navigare cu barca pentru navigatorii noi: ieșirea dintr-o situație dificilă

Sfat rapid de navigare cu barca pentru navigatorii noi: ieșirea dintr-o situație dificilă



Alăturați-vă lui Ray Fernandez de la Bridge Marina din Highlands, New Jersey, în timp ce împărtășește acest sfat rapid de navigare cu barca pentru navigatorii noi… cum să ieșiți dintr-o situație dificilă. Căutați mai multe sfaturi de navigare și cum să faceți? Urmărește-ne chiar aici pe YouTube sau urmărește blogul nostru Boat Better with Bridge: https://www.bridgemarina.com/blog

source

38 thoughts on “Sfat rapid de navigare cu barca pentru navigatorii noi: ieșirea dintr-o situație dificilă

  1. Great instruction! Driving a boat in situations like this takes a good amount of touch and feel. The only way to develop that is practice with your vessel. This center console will handle much differently than an inboard, for example.

  2. when i used to go out with my grandparents on their catamaran we had this hook thing on a pole with a rubber stopper on the end they used to push away from other boats in the marina, treasured memories man i hope to have a boat of my own someday

  3. The biggest mistake is thinking the wheel steers a boat like a car. It doesn't work quite the same. Turn right with a car and the steering (wheels on front) pull or point the car to the right and the rear follows. On a boat turning the wheel to the right pushes the stern to the left which points the boat to the right, but the steering (rudder) pushes. It has to push left to go right.

  4. That's counterintuitive as can be to us who are accustomed to driving on land where the front of the vehicle controls where we go.

    Boats' direction is controlled by the direction the rear of the boat is pushed.

  5. People need to think of it similar to driving a forklift. Unlike a car the steering is at the back of a boat.

  6. New captains need to use resources like this. Have you done a vid on docking with strong current? I see so many on the river struggling to maneuver in tight

  7. Try it with a 52 foot wooden hull dead-rise with a fixed prop and rudder with no bow thrusters, with a diesel with a 1:1 reverse gear. That's how all those commercial fisherman in the Chesapeake bay do it. If you can drive one of those boats. You can drive anything. 😉

  8. For surf boats more throttle does help though, those boats get very sideways at slow speeds with wind. Using the throttle helps straighten them out and helps the boat respond better to steering wheel inputs.

  9. Eh, it's not hard. Is sort of like pushing a shopping cart with wiggly wheels in the back. And the motor is your hand. I've been conning a large boat since 14. Figure it out, and stop scratching boats. Directed at some 40 y/o relatives not directly related to me. Let them borrow the boat, scratched both sides all the way down, and filled it up with gas. The only problem is they filled the water tank. Don't drive in tight spaces if you're not comfortable. And don't loan your boat out lesson learned.

  10. Whilst I'm no expert sea captain I found boating really easy after just one afternoon in a quiet marina just low power maneuvering around the place and getting used to the physics of the vessel on the water. It worked really well for me so I recommend that people have patience when it comes to boat operating for the first time. Your throttle is also your brake, you won't always go where you point it, Slight movements with the throttle when youre in tight areas and if you have fenders, use them!! Be considerate of other vessel owners around you and they should be considerate back.

Comments are closed.

Follow by Email
YouTube
YouTube
WhatsApp