Systems & how-tos
How marine autopilots work on cruising yachts
Autopilot types for Nordic cruisers — tiller, wheel, and below-deck drives, heading sensors, and common faults on older installs.
Overview
A marine autopilot holds course by moving the rudder when the boat wanders off heading. On short-handed Baltic passages it is safety equipment — but only if the drive, sensor, and calibration match your hull.
For service intervals see autopilot and steering service.
Architecture
| Layer | Typical parts |
|---|---|
| Brain | Control head or NMEA processor |
| Sensor | Fluxgate compass, rate gyro, or IMU |
| Drive | Tiller pilot, wheel clutch, or below-deck linear ram |
| Rudder feedback | Optional on larger systems |
Tiller pilots suit small boats; wheel drives clamp to the pedestal; below-deck rams push a tiller arm or quadrant — best torque for heavy weather but needs alignment.
Setup that matters
- Commissioning — run auto-learn in calm water; wrong rudder gain causes hunting
- Sea state — increase damping in chop; reduce gain when surfing
- Power — autopilot is a major 12 V load; monitor alternator and battery state on long runs
Common faults
- Drive clutch slip — worn belt or low hydraulic fluid on some wheel units
- Compass interference — speakers, steel tools near fluxgate
- Loose tiller arm — play masks as autopilot fault
- Stale firmware — NMEA2000 networks need consistent device versions
FAQ
Can autopilot steer in heavy weather?
Quality below-deck drives on well-balanced boats yes — but reef early and keep a human on watch. Autopilot is not a substitute for seamanship.