Motor Boat & Yachting — August 2017

(WallPaper) #1

James Maxey thought


he’d created his perfect


boat by fi tting stabilisers


to his 52ft trawler, but


it turns out there was a


bigger twist still to come


Words & pictures James Maxey

DOUBLE


THE


TROUBLE,


TWICE THE


FUN


OWNER’S UPGRADE


R

egular readers may remember the
article I wrote last year about refitting
our sturdy Scottish trawler yacht
Silver Dee for use in the Med (‘Silver
Lining’, MBY December 2016). The
upgrades made it much better suited
to its new life in the sun but at the end
of our first season in Antibes, our thoughts started
to turn to zero-speed stabilisers.
The Vosper mini fins fitted to Silver Dee had
served it well since 1976 but rough seas could
overpower them and of course, they weren’t
zero-speed units. A couple of sleepless nights at
anchor with our seven-year-old twins on board soon
demonstrated to us that unless we fitted zero-speed
stabilisers, we’d have to restrict ourselves to marina
berths even when we’d prefer to be at anchor.
We’d been on other boats in the area fitted with
Sleipner’s curved-fin zero-speed systems and found
them to be very effective, so we went straight to


Sleipner for a quote. Bryn and his team at Sleipner
UK proved to be extremely friendly, helpful and
knowledgeable. We took the plunge and wrote
out a cheque for the whole kit to be delivered to
our home in Cheshire so that we could drive down
to Antibes in a convoy of vans with the team from
West Coast Marine at Troon, who had done all the
previous refit work on Silver Dee.

FITTING THE FINS
On arrival in Antibes, the first job was to carefully
take out the old system so that we could try and
re-sell the bits and pieces later, then we set to
work on Silver Dee’s unusual hull. The multi-chine
hull was designed by Allen McLachlan at G L
Watson as a prototype for the RNLI’s Arun lifeboat,
without any consideration for future owners wanting
to retrofit curved-fin zero-speed stabilisers! This
involved lots of careful measuring and grinding
away, both inside and outside the hull, and then

building it back up to make sure the fins had
sufficient clearance.
Once the hydraulic actuators were in place,
my engineer friend Alec glassed in additional
aluminium supports for extra strength, as these
fins are much bigger and more powerful than
the previous Vospers. The team then divided, with
Alec fitting the control panel and GPS wiring and my
dad Fred tackling the wiring for the hydraulic unit,
which is driven both from a power take-off on the
port gearbox and an auxiliary power pack from the
generator (for the stabilisation at rest). West Coast
Marine tackled the fibreglassing for the installation
of the fins and the hydraulic power pack itself.
After a week’s concentrated work in the yard, we
put Silver Dee back in the water (it’s a lot cheaper
in the Med to be in the water than in a yard!) and
got the excellent Hydraulique Méditerranée out to
plumb up the hydraulics. A couple of weeks later, it
was time for the first test. The auxiliary power pack

SILVER DEE
James’s original
52ft trawler yacht

SILVER ECHO
James’s new Aquastar
Explorer 74
Free download pdf