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Thread: Dodgers anyone?

  1. #1
    Join Date
    Sep 2001
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    Northern MN
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    Dodgers anyone?

    It's still way too cold to so much as touch a power tool around here so I've been doing some perspectives and doodelingwith lines. I keep gravitating back to adding a dodger to 113, maybe even laminating a hard dodger that pops off for transport. How many of you out there have a dodger on your ariel and how do you like it? What are the strong points and what don't you like? When looking at the wonnerful pics of everyone's boats here(yes I download them all) it seems like the dodger gets miniaturized and I'm wondering if there's still enough room get through the companion way comfortably. I know there's some hotter issues burning on the board right now and I've plenty of time before we get to dodger manufacturing, but I'd really appreciate some 'real experince' info. What the heck, even if it's only your opinion and not your experience I'd still like your input.
    Some thoughts I'm entertaining are incorporating the dodger into a larger canvas and screen 'room' that covers the cockpit for another cabin area when on the hook(land of 10,000 lakes, 10,000,000 mosquitos). Soft-top vs. hard-top. Maybe even raising the boom a couple of inches. Much, much more to be read before I do something that wacko! This boat will probably never race with me at the helm so I'm not so worried about that tack.
    Tony G

  2. #2
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    Geoff's hard dodger, for example, does raise the question of windage in a blow and control of the Ariel - and that you'll probably loose it if you pitchpole or get swept by a comber. On other forums, everyone agrees that it's difficult to get a hard dodger to look good - but all experienced cruisers (except the masochists) agree they're necessary for the quality of life, a cruiser's life.

    Aestheticly I'd agree that Ariel's look best with a pram style dodger where everything folds down. Maybe it looks more shippey because it is part of the rig rather than an extension of the designer's coachroof sculpture.

    Instruments, including a centerline compass (Geoff - and me too) can be mounted on a molded dash over the forward end of the companionway. The hard dodger creates another room or covered porch where you can put things. It's a real solid grabbing point when you're standing in the cockpit or leaving and entering. And a place to rig a midboom travelor and the solar panels. Maybe the propane can be mounted on the seahood. and/or the inflatable. Theis has a gorgeous pram hood and flexible solar panel installation which in terms of weight saved alone could be thought of as ideal for voyaging.

    I'm all ears...

  3. #3
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    FROM GENE ROBERTS #312 LADY J

    Dear Tony--
    We have had our dodger on Ariel 321 LADY J for about the last seven or so
    years. No other feature on the boat has been as favorably received by
    the First Mate as the dodger. It was fitted by the canvas people who
    designed and installed it. There is plenty of room below the boom for it
    to fit. When using the companion way, you do have to duck under it, but
    it is not a tight squeeze. The boat has a solid vang, and the only
    concern is to tieup the main sail cover so that it does not flap and
    scrape the top of the dodger and thus wear through the fabric. This
    dodger has a stainless steel frame to which the cloth dodger is attached
    using large-sized plastic zippers to give a nice, tight fit. It is no
    big deal to take down or put up and stowes neatly in its own bag when not
    in use. For the last five years I have given up taking it down and
    putting it up and have just left it up through hell and high water with
    no serious problems, except to douse it with a recommended chemical to
    preserve its water-proofness.
    Altho the ads show a skipper standing on his hard-top dodger (without the
    main being up), I see little advantage over a canvas dodger. Nowadays,
    the canvas never seems to wear out, and tho the blue color has faded
    somewhat, the canvas as suffered little by the constant exposure to the
    elements by leaving the dodger up more or less permanently. The cost of
    the dodger, including design for the boat, materials and labor, including
    installation on the boat was just a shade less that the cost of a new
    main sail.

    I have two major recommendations:

    1. Always opt for the optional additional hand rails on each side of
    the dodger, and at the aft end of the dodger. They provide hand-holds
    that make it much safer as you move from the cockpit up to the mast or
    bow of the boat.

    2. Regardless of cost, opt for the very best plastic windows for the
    front and sides of the dodger. There are now available plastic windows
    that are resistant to scratches and UV radiation and which will not
    "fog-up" as they age.

    LADY J is usually the solo boat with its dodger up during YRA races on
    San Francisco Bay, since competitive skippers probably cringe at the
    thought of the additonal windage (except when running with the wind), but
    I've been happy to trade that off for a comfortable, non-tiring passage
    across the Slot (so called) with an ebb tide pushing against the late
    afternoon 25 knot wind coming through the Golden Gate, with the spray
    coming off the bow and running down the the plastic windows of the dodger
    without the need to even wear foul-weather gear.

    Best wisher, Gene Roberts 312 LADY J.

  4. #4
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    Gene
    Thanks for your experience based input and your recomendations are noted. It's only within the last six or seven months that I've been able to stomach the looks of hard dodgers. Alot of them seem to have that slapped on 'shack' look but I'm finding more and more that blend better with the lines of the boat. A few years back Good Old Boat mag. had an article by an individual that built a hard molded dodger that had the shape and lines of a canvas jobbie. 'Looked traditional and had good hand holds too. Aesthetics aren't the driving force behind this idea but I have to say why ruin a good looking boat!
    Tony G

  5. #5
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    McHenry, IL, but sail out of Racine WI
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    A word of caution. It depends on your size. At 6'2", I have a hard time getting below (safely) with a dodger. Maybe I could learn a technique. I don't have a dodger on Solsken.

  6. #6
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    Theis
    That's legit! It's also why I'm leaning toward a hard model with an extra set of hand holds for going down and the whole thing maybe a little farther fore than most for clearance goin' top. It just never looks like much room! From the gallery threads I see number 407 has some appliances added. I think I'll pester that nice couple next

  7. #7
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    One other point, at least where I sail. Sometimes I have to get below fast to get something, such as tools, or the seas and circumstances are not favorable. I place a value on not being encumbered and being able to get below and back up quickly and safely, even when the boat is over 30 or 40 degrees.

  8. #8
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    Sep 2001
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    Santa Cruz, California
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    Question

    It has occurred to me that with the relatively low boom on the Ariel that a hard dodger, or hard-topped canvas-sided dodger with a removable (perhaps sliding) panel in the top would offer some advantages. Cabin access would be much easier without having to remove the whole dodger. A lower profile dodger would also be possible with such a design. Has anyone ever built or considered building such a dodger?
    Scott

  9. #9
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    Thanks Gene. And Theis makes an excelent point on access thru the companionway. [Must have been Airing with the hood - you guys with dark hulls, your boats all look alike!]
    Thinking about preserving the good part of the hard dodger I can see a sturdy ss pipe arch right there at the end or the cabin at a suitable height with a pram hood extension and side pieces that hold the cloth and tubes in place.

    I imagine Geoff had that in mind with his hard top.

    Made some 'storey poles' for testing just how far aft of the c'way you could go with the rigid part. Just about anything makes it difficult because we go below thru the top of the cabin. Being a wannabe live-aboard I may have to perfect a diving technique for rapid egress.

    Strong hand holds under the arch and reasonable abs is probably the only way. BUT then we are supposed to go down ladders facing them. Probably some c.c reg about that. If we had legs like a bird I can see going down backwards.

    Research reveals that hard dodgers are watertight (lines aft from the mast?} and keep breaking waves and heavy spray safely out of the cockpit.
    It provides standing and leaning {taking sights) and hand holds, making standing in the cockpit safer.
    A rigid dodger and the seahood significantly expands the surface area of the deck.
    The wind and wave shield part of the structure provides a visually better mount for the compass and other instruments (like the sounder) There is also a dry and handy place for the binoculars and nightvision scope, the radio. charts and expensive toys.
    Fabric doesn't do so well in the tropics. A hard dodger is more insulated from heat, cold and noise.
    It is part of the boat and adds "another room."
    I'd like to add that the hard dodger also makes a midboom mainsheet rig possible. And I, for one, would really like to hear opinions on this from potential cruisers?
    Do you racers really like the mainsheet in the cockpit like that? Puts a big part of the cockpit off limits wouldn't you say? Seems to me ANY kind of an arch in the back here would be a great improvement.
    Last edited by ebb; 02-26-2003 at 08:46 AM.

  10. #10
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    Talking Dodger on the magnificent Houdini #407

    Houdini has both dodger and bimini, designed as an integrated system of sorts that allows a tallish fellow like me to enjoy some freedom of movement in the cockpit--and get some protection from the Texas sun and wind. The dodger has a zipperred center panel that rolls up, making movement through the companionway easy. We only keep the center panel closed in the winter-sails on days that tend to freeze-off body parts. The bimini zippers to the trailing edge of the dodger and is cut so that I can remove that panel and have clear standing and moving room in the forward half of the cockpit. With this portion secured, I have to stoop a bit to move around under it. Overall, I like the combination of dodger and bimini. If I were to do it over again, though, I might work in some way to raise the boom a bit and then raise the bimini frame a tad. As it stands, though, it is low enough not to look lumpy on Houdini--and Houdini gets lots of big compliments on the water, something I'm vain enough to like so much that I hesitate to change for mere comfort.

  11. #11
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    Who made yours?

    George,

    Who made Houdini's combo bimini/dodger? Someone here in town (Houston?)
    Kent

  12. #12
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    for #376 re dodger and bimini

    The bimini/dodger was made in Clear Lake---and I can't remember the guy's name right off. I'll have to go back through my records to get that info for you, but I will get it for you.

  13. #13
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    Dodger photos for reference

    Must be a hundred* photos of mostly soft dodgers on this site - including Ariel.
    http://www.newjsi.com/dodger%20pictures.aspx
    www.newjsi.com/east%20coast.aspx

    google
    East Coast Dodgers


    *actually about 340!
    Last edited by ebb; 09-14-2006 at 10:46 AM.

  14. #14
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    Here's an interesting drawing from the above site:
    Attached Images  

  15. #15
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    east coast style dodgers

    Can't make sense of that sketch, can you?

    This was just for liberating ideas, so no recommendation is attached to this outfit by me.

    The 'A' price is about $1125 for an off-the-shelf Ariel dodger. Which in the present incredibly devalued dollar seems pretty reasonable. To get the windows to last longer you have to add on the cost of covers. And I've read that you can get a sunbrella fabric with vinyl laminated to the inside which makes cleaning (mildew) a breeze. All more bucks.

    W A Y down at the bottom of one of the pages there is a line that says all custom dodgers are made in the 'west coast style.' Anybody know what that means?? West Coast Style may mean that it is more expensive?? Hah!
    Or maybe the style uses 1" tubing, which is way more sturdy. And expensive.

    And a dodger that stays up all the time needs a grab bar along the cockpit end. And probably a couple short rails on the sides. They'll be used constantly.
    Last edited by ebb; 09-14-2006 at 10:21 AM.

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