Warren asked:
"Harvey, how do you adapt this for entering a slip from a fairway?"
It is easy. Since the stern is where the OB's are and that is where the control is coming from that is the portion of the boat that moves laterally, when the OB's are turned. Reversing the propulsion of one engine will twist the boat, but you want to contact the dock first and not have too much twist. AND for sure there isn't room to do the "half arc" approach in a slip, usually.
SO.... BACK IN. Approach your slip. Using the throttles and F-R gearing, rotate the boat to point away from your slip, THEN gently back into the slip, with a slight twist towards where you want to contact it. 6" to a foot from that point, the far side (NO not the cartoon :roll

the opposite side of the boat from the dock OB needs to go into Forward with just a slight power bump to overcome the rearward inertia, and then twist the bow towards the doc.
An alternative to the forward power bump and twist might be to put a stern line onto a cleat, and then put that farside :wink: engine into forward at idle and it will bring the boat over to the dock and hold it there. :shock: just want to make real sure that stern line and cleat are up to that.
I have used that only a very few times when there is an off dock wind or current. It is quick to get the stern line on, ( a loop over the dock cleat and then a twist and tie on the boat cleat), and then bring the boat to the dock and stabilize before disembarking to do the bow line. Takes longer to write it out here than to do it.
Love My Twins, "Port and Starbird"
Harvey
SleepyC :moon :moon
