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18 March 2021, 12:09
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#21
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Member
Country: UK - England
Town: Southampton
Boat name: SMH Rib / War Shot
Make: Ribtec / Scorpion
Length: 4m +
Engine: 100hp Yam/150hp opt
Join Date: Sep 2003
Posts: 2,069
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Miss Guided
Hi Folks
Thank you all for your responses to my posting on the Padstow Kill Cord Tragedy.
The whole thing was horrific but one of the pictures that really got me was the one of a second rib trying to board Milly and get her under control. I've tried uploading the photo but couldn't - its in the MAIB report.
Anyway, tThis has all got me to thinking about dual kill cords – one for me and, say, one for a second person, possibly a child, who might be driving. If I go overboard the two kill cords must easily separate to stop the other person going in as well. At the same time, the engine MUST cut out.
Do you have any experience, or thoughts on this please?
Many thanks MGx
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For the RYA RIB Challenge where children are driving they wear one kill cord.
The Judge / examiner / instructor who is in the front of the boat out of the way has a second kill cord and can operate this at any point he feels necessary. This is an additional system and not common.
A very exceptional situation though and not common practice to have multiple kill cords.
My son's drive our RIB - close supervision is what's required and the kill cord must be worn.
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18 March 2021, 14:38
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#22
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Member
Country: UK - Wales
Town: Pembroke
Boat name: Rapscallion
Make: Humber Destroyer 6.0
Length: 5m +
Engine: E-TEC 150
Join Date: Jul 2006
Posts: 360
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If you have somebody driving who is not fully competent (child or adult) you should be sat alongside them in a position you can easily reach the throttle and YOU should be wearing the kill cord as you are the one in charge.
When that person is sufficiently competent to take control of the boat unsupervised, THEY wear the kill cord.
Simples.
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18 March 2021, 18:42
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#23
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Member
Country: UK - England
Town: Gloucester
Boat name: Lunasea
Make: Ribcraft
Length: 5m +
Engine: Suzi 140
MMSI: 232005050
Join Date: Sep 2007
Posts: 2,000
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Jon Tallis
If you have somebody driving who is not fully competent (child or adult) you should be sat alongside them in a position you can easily reach the throttle and YOU should be wearing the kill cord as you are the one in charge.
When that person is sufficiently competent to take control of the boat unsupervised, THEY wear the kill cord.
Simples.
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+1
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Member of the Macmillan Round the Isle of Wight Club
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25 March 2021, 11:53
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#24
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Member
Country: Ireland
Town: Cork
Boat name: Cúr na dDonnta
Make: Excalibur + Zapcat
Length: 6m +
Engine: Merc120TDI,Tohatsu50
Join Date: Jun 2005
Posts: 321
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Jon Tallis
If you have somebody driving who is not fully competent (child or adult) you should be sat alongside them in a position you can easily reach the throttle and YOU should be wearing the kill cord as you are the one in charge.
Simples.
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Exactly!
BTW it's important to ensure the trainees know the restart procedure and where the spare cord is should you go swimming. If you've ever had a trainee hook a RIB you'll realise absolutely anyone can be ejected. G Force rules!
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25 March 2021, 14:13
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#25
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Member
Country: UK - Wales
Town: Pembroke
Boat name: Rapscallion
Make: Humber Destroyer 6.0
Length: 5m +
Engine: E-TEC 150
Join Date: Jul 2006
Posts: 360
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Daibheid
Exactly!
BTW it's important to ensure the trainees know the restart procedure and where the spare cord is should you go swimming. If you've ever had a trainee hook a RIB you'll realise absolutely anyone can be ejected. G Force rules!
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Agree![emoji4]
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26 March 2021, 18:18
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#26
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Member
Country: UK - Scotland
Town: Scotland
Boat name: Clyde adventurer
Make: Humber
Length: 8m +
Engine: Twin Merc 150 4str
Join Date: May 2015
Posts: 472
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Daibheid
Exactly!
BTW it's important to ensure the trainees know the restart procedure and where the spare cord is should you go swimming. If you've ever had a trainee hook a RIB you'll realise absolutely anyone can be ejected. G Force rules!
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Agreed g force does trump humans [emoji23]
Not sure a trainee should be anywhere near hooking a boat though!
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01 April 2021, 18:59
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#27
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Member
Country: UK - England
Town: Farnborough
Boat name: Narcissus
Make: Cobra
Length: 7m +
Engine: Optimax 225
Join Date: Jul 2003
Posts: 2,364
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For racing purposes, IIRC, all crew in board must have a kill cord attached.
In addition, there must be secondary caps or whatever in each case so that if you lose a crew member you can still restart the engine(s).
My personal view for pleasure boating - the most competent person on board should be on a kill cord at all times. No use if one of the kids were driving and I go overboard. If I go overboard, I want the boat to emergency stop.
With a competent mate on board, I'm OK with the helm being the only one on the kill cord.
I started to write a bit about hooking, but I suspect Daibheid was more thinking about the type of hook where you're cruising along and cross a wake badly whilst turning, rather than a proper 80mph stepped hull "oh shit" moment.
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08 April 2021, 20:30
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#28
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Member
Country: UK - Wales
Town: Cardiff
Boat name: CBYC
Length: no boat
Join Date: Feb 2021
Posts: 10
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Dont get me started on people in the states not wearing kill cords,
loads of videos of people driving small boats not just ribs on youtube, not wearing the kill cord, I make it a habit of commenting of the benefits of wearing the kill cord. People not wearing kill cords is my biggest pet hate
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08 April 2021, 20:37
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#29
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Member
Country: UK - England
Town: Farnborough
Boat name: Narcissus
Make: Cobra
Length: 7m +
Engine: Optimax 225
Join Date: Jul 2003
Posts: 2,364
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Not just the states. We’re just as bad in the kingdom. I see it all over the place.
It’s inexcusable
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08 April 2021, 21:01
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#30
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Member
Country: UK - Wales
Town: Cardiff
Boat name: CBYC
Length: no boat
Join Date: Feb 2021
Posts: 10
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Matt
Not just the states. We’re just as bad in the kingdom. I see it all over the place.
It’s inexcusable
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Matt i agree buddy, i'm a safetyboat driver at a major club in south wales, and the amount of times i seen private owner boats out with no kill cords it winds me up,
i'm based at CBYC buddy
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08 April 2021, 21:17
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#31
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Member
Country: UK - England
Town: Farnborough
Boat name: Narcissus
Make: Cobra
Length: 7m +
Engine: Optimax 225
Join Date: Jul 2003
Posts: 2,364
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Yeah, safety boat duties is what I cut my teeth on too. Happy days.
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08 April 2021, 21:38
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#32
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Member
Country: UK - Wales
Town: Cardiff
Boat name: CBYC
Length: no boat
Join Date: Feb 2021
Posts: 10
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Matt
Yeah, safety boat duties is what I cut my teeth on too. Happy days.
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i'm bosun at the club, i love it, , got 6 ribs to use plus 4 jaffas
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08 April 2021, 22:11
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#33
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Member
Country: UK - Scotland
Town: Easdale
Boat name: Miss Isle
Make: Solent 6.9
Length: 6m +
Engine: 225 optimax
Join Date: Jan 2008
Posts: 1,427
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Agree with Jon Tallis. I let my grandkids drive my rib and have let me 78 year old father in law. I sit on the tube next to them. Kill cord is on me and I can each the throttle and wheel if necessary
Tbh they are happier to have a go with this set up.
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I was born not knowing and have had only a little time to change that here and there.
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08 April 2021, 22:19
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#34
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Member
Country: UK - England
Town: Farnborough
Boat name: Narcissus
Make: Cobra
Length: 7m +
Engine: Optimax 225
Join Date: Jul 2003
Posts: 2,364
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I have 2 kill cord locations on mine. Both passenger/navigator (in racing parlance) and helm/throttleman location.
I use the quicksilver toggleswitch because in an emergency if a cord got pulled, I can just flick the switch to restart rather than have to scrabble around to put a spare cap on. (not proposing that as advisable, I do practice what I preach. But it's another "option" to deal with the unknown). It also means for general nobbing around when I wouldn't connect the navigator, I don't need the 2nd cord dangling in the way either.
And, FWIW, I think I recall a thread on here once saying keep an eye on the condition of your killcords. They can degrade and eventually snap. So have just ordered a new pair for the coming season, with the old one(s) being relegated to spares. The current ones the elastic has become a bit less elastic than it was.
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14 April 2021, 14:56
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#35
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Member
Country: Ireland
Town: Cork
Boat name: Cúr na dDonnta
Make: Excalibur + Zapcat
Length: 6m +
Engine: Merc120TDI,Tohatsu50
Join Date: Jun 2005
Posts: 321
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Iankristy
Agreed g force does trump humans [emoji23]
Not sure a trainee should be anywhere near hooking a boat though!
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Hooking is not the exclusive preserve of trainees - by a long way! On that occasion I was Training Officer for a dive club and training a few coxw'ns. They have to get experience at all speeds and that trip was me, a trainee diver and a trainee cox with quite a few hours up. We were on a long transit to collect divers on an empty 4.5m 50HP RIB with tiller steering. I'd taken the boat out to sea and clear of the nasty stuff and handed over to drive a straight line to a mark 5nm away. I'd cautioned that the tiller needed a firm hand and if it got away at all, it'd end badly and to take it easy and get a feel before using big throttle openings.
All was well for five minutes, 1m open ocean swell on a sunny smooth sea. But rather than sit on the tubes as normal, I chose to sit across the deck, back and feet wedged between the tubes. Just in case.
I noticed our heading swing a few degrees a few times and called it out. Perfectly normal instructing anyone driving fast boats. We eventually seemed to settle in to a straight course and inevitably the throttle got wrung open while holding a straight course. Ideal conditions and part of learning but sooner than I wanted and said so. Seconds later I thought we were starting to veer slightly again to port so turned and said "watch it". I saw the port side trainee leaning into the RIB at which point g-force was kicking in and he'd no leverage except his bootees on a wet deck and I could see it coming. It was over in a millisecond.
At full thrust, he let the tiller get that fraction too much off centre, overpower him and break free. At about 25-30 knots, the engine snapped hard to starboard, the RIB turned instantly and violently 90deg to port. The forward momentum made it continue on the original line of travel - now sideways - and it promptly used the starboard side of the V hull as a ramp and launched itself into a sideways jump.
The keel and chines stopped it -like it hit a wall. The cox went up and flew across the boat and slammed into the diver sitting opposite on the starboard quarter. Adrenaline had them locked on to the small A-frame and incredibly they withstood the G force from being ejected along with the Cox cannoning across! The RIB almost flipped over sideways but settled for violently rocking
There was spray everywhere, the engine screaming on the rev-limiter and cavitating and two white as a sheet faces tangled together. I was certain there had be a fractured skull -or worse- and the blood was about to come. I killed the engine and keyed the radio about to call a Mayday but realized no-one appeared to have been hurt. It was a very scary experience all round especially as back in the early Nineties kill-cords were rare.
Near perfect conditions but big tiller outboards need attention especially on a boat with a lot of keel.
I put the utterly terrified and distraught trainee cox back on the helm and we continued at a more subdued pace.
Several lessons learned.
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14 April 2021, 15:09
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#36
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Administrator
Country: UK - England
Town: Brighton
Length: 3m +
Join Date: May 2000
Posts: 7,108
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The most spectacular accidents do tend to occur in near perfect conditions!
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14 April 2021, 15:44
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#37
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Member
Country: UK - England
Town: South Yorks
Boat name: Black Pig
Make: Ribcraft
Length: 5m +
Engine: DF140a
MMSI: 235111389
Join Date: Feb 2008
Posts: 12,165
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Quote:
Originally Posted by John Kennett
The most spectacular accidents do tend to occur in near perfect conditions!
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That’s because you’re off guard. I’ve spent all my working life in “dangerous professions” mining/construction etc. I’ve managed many risky operations, confined spaces/complex lifts using mobile/tracked/barge mounted cranes etc. No one ever got hurt during any of those operations. They were risked assessed, method statemented to the nth degree. The accidents happened afterwards, walking back to the car park or canteen when everyone had relaxed.
__________________
Rule#2: Never argue with an idiot. He'll drag you down to his level & then beat you with experience.
Rule#3: Tha' can't educate pork.
Rule#4: Don't feed the troll
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14 April 2021, 17:56
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#38
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Member
Country: Ireland
Town: Cork
Boat name: Cúr na dDonnta
Make: Excalibur + Zapcat
Length: 6m +
Engine: Merc120TDI,Tohatsu50
Join Date: Jun 2005
Posts: 321
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Quote:
Originally Posted by John Kennett
The most spectacular accidents do tend to occur in near perfect conditions!
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Could/should be written in stone!!
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14 April 2021, 18:20
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#39
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Member
Country: UK - England
Town: Farnborough
Boat name: Narcissus
Make: Cobra
Length: 7m +
Engine: Optimax 225
Join Date: Jul 2003
Posts: 2,364
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I've experienced the same - didn't hook it, but they really can bite can't they.
Can you get dampers for them?
Quote:
Originally Posted by Daibheid
Near perfect conditions but big tiller outboards need attention especially on a boat with a lot of keel.
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14 April 2021, 20:18
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#40
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Administrator
Country: UK - England
Town: Brighton
Length: 3m +
Join Date: May 2000
Posts: 7,108
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Quote:
Originally Posted by Pikey Dave
That’s because you’re off guard.
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It’s partly that, but also because you’re unlikely to be on the ragged edge hanging everything out riding the prop if there’s a decent chop on. Even if you’re focussed things can unravel very very quickly.
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