SAIL

The Cable Guy

hen we acquired our new project boat, a 1987 Pearson 39-2, it was evident that she was in need of much TLC. Not only had she been sitting forlorn and unloved in a boatyard for a couple of years, but those of her systems that were not original were a couple of decades old. Virtually everything was in need of overhaul or replacement, including her elderly suite of Autohelm sailing instruments dating back to the early 1990s, connected by the original Seatalk network. The speed and depth seemed to work fine, as did the autopilot—as far as I could tell—but the wind transducer at the masthead was frozen and the C80 chartplotter at the nav station was not only in the wrong place but a good 10 years old—a museum piece by modern standards. Oddly, there was one piece of modern tech in place—a Seatalk 1 to Seatalk NG converter—which surprised me, as there was

You’re reading a preview, subscribe to read more.

More from Sail

Sail1 min readLeadership
Sail
PRESIDENT GARY DE SANCTIS EDITOR-IN-CHIEF WENDY MITMAN CLARKE MANAGING EDITOR LYDIA MULLAN WEB EDITOR EMME HURLEY CRUISING EDITOR CHARLES J. DOANE CHARTER EDITOR ZUZANA PROCHAZKA TECHNICAL EDITOR ADAM COVE CONTRIBUTING EDITORS NIGEL CALDER, DON CASEY
Sail13 min read
Steady On
Peter Harken needs little introduction in the world of sailing. With his brother, Olaf, he started a shoestring business building collegiate and Olympic class dinghies (Vanguard Boats) in Wisconsin in 1968, which evolved into Harken Yacht Equipment a
Sail3 min read
SAIL Wins Big At Annual Boating Writers Award
SAIL magazine took home 11 awards at the annual Boating Writers International (BWI) writing contest, winning first place in five of the 16 categories for stories that cover the range of the sailing life, from racing, chartering, and cruising to safet

Related