Systems & how-tos
Steering systems basics on cruising yachts
Wheel, tiller, and cable steering on Nordic cruisers — quadrants, sheaves, rudder bearings, and play you should not ignore.
Overview
Steering converts helm input into rudder angle. Production cruisers use tiller (small boats), wire-and-pulley (older), or hydraulic / rack systems (larger wheels). Play at the wheel often starts at sheaves or the quadrant, not at the rudder stock.
Pair with autopilot basics — autopilot load accelerates wear on loose steering.
Tiller steering
Direct tiller to rudder stock — simplest, best feel. Check tiller pin, stock bearings, and emergency tiller access on wheel boats (often under cockpit sole).
Cable / wire systems
| Part | Failure sign |
|---|---|
| Quadrant | Cracks at keyway; loose bolts |
| Sheaves | Flat spots, seized bearings, misaligned leads |
| Cable | Broken strands, rust inside conduit |
| Chain at wheel | Jumping sprocket under load |
Conduit water rusts cables from inside — grease per manufacturer or replace on age.
Rudder and stock
- Rudder bearings — lift or drop at the stock indicates wear
- GRP rudder blades — tap for voids; water inside causes freeze damage
- Skeg-hung vs spade — spade rudders need precise bearing preload
At sea trial, note wheel turns lock-to-lock and whether rudder centres without bias — see sea trial checklist.
FAQ
How much wheel play is OK?
A few degrees free before rudder moves is common on old cable systems — more than 10–15° needs investigation before offshore passages.
Next steps
Read autopilot service or book advisory on a candidate purchase.