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Subject: Re: log lines
From: George Huxtable (george@XXX.XXX)
Date: Wed Jun 11 2003 - 03:16:34 EDT
Steven Wepster recounts his troubles with log lines, and I have had my own.
I occasionally tow a Walker log from the counter, though it has to come in
when I am trailing a mackerel line, because the two become inextricably
tangled.
As far as the log line is concerned, I am my own worst enemy. Approaching
harbour, if I start the engine, and at some point select reverse, propeller
and logline come into conflict. It's essential to remember to bring in the
log first, but I am notoriously absent-minded about such things, and now on
my last bronze spinner.
I also have an electronic towed log, a spinning plastic propeller on a
non-rotating flex, but that too can suffer in the same way.
I've tried a paddlewheel log protruding through the bottom, but after a
week or so in harbour it gets clogged by tiny shrimp-like organisms who
find it a desirable habitat. The damn things brace their little legs to
stop the revolving-door of the paddlewheel from rotating and ejecting them.
I can eject them after removing the tranducer and replugging the hole, but
in the few seconds between those acts, the resultant fountain of water gets
everywhere. It's also unnerving to look out at green water throgh that
hole.
Usually, I just guess my speed for DR, and after owning the same craft for
30 years I can usually guess that pretty well. Does anyone have a better
solution?
George.
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contact George Huxtable by email at george@XXX.XXX by phone at
01865 820222 (from outside UK, +44 1865 820222), or by mail at 1 Sandy
Lane, Southmoor, Abingdon, Oxon OX13 5HX, UK.
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