Paddle Power wrote:
“It is a very clever and multi-functional hanger, seat and yoke design.”
was it made in-house? Is there an aftermarket version?
That height adjustable seat/yoke was standard on the Mad River Monarch and Verlen Kruger’s Sea Wind. The Kruger designed Loon may have had a similar seat in later iterations but the Loons I’ve seen had a height adjustable sliding seat that was a bit more kludgy to raise or lower, and lacked the seat inverted yoke feature.
https://used-kayaks.com/not-specified/s ... yak-138639I have not seen an aftermarket version of that seat sold by a manufacturer. Folks who have built stripper or composite decked canoes styled after the Monarch or Sea Wind have copied the slotted seat hanger brackets and yoke design with a bucket seat pan.
I used a square of that Kevlar foam board to make a light weight folding tabletop for a blue barrel, a backgammon tabletop. The checkerboard others are made from 1/4” birch plywood; the 30L birch version weighs 1lb 11oz.
P8033834 by
Mike McCrea, on Flickr
The Kevlar foam board version weighs 1lb 2oz; the weight savings and limited availability of the Kevlar foam board for that application wasn’t worth it. Kruger-style seat hangers could probably be DIYed okoume marine plywood sheathed with glass and epoxy.
MRC made Monarchs from 1982 to 1995. Mine is one of the last made, with a ’96 HIN. Early Monarchs used thinner Kevlar foam board for the seat brackets and the slots sometimes deformed from paddler weight on the seat. That was the case with a friend’s early ‘80’s Monarch; we epoxied Dynel cord in the hanger slots to prevent further deformation.
A final inspection of the decks and everything there was good to go. The webbing loop bungee connections on the back deck, strap grommets and etc were chosen to be as low-profile as possible.
P5290002 by
Mike McCrea, on Flickr
If I ever needed to cowboy reentry straddling the stern deck (knock wood) I didn’t want any nut-grabbers standing tall. T’aint a concern on the front deck, unless I’m attempting the rare “reverse cowboy”, which begins to sound Texas Rodeo Kama Sutra-ish. The tall standing pad eyes and SS fairleads for the Pacific Action sail are a non-issue on the front deck.
Time for a different perspective on Monarch maintenance. I’ve seen the bottom. I’ve seen the top. I haven’t yet had a close look under the decks and know there is a rudder pedal issue that needs adjustment.
I retrofitted the rudder pedals with self-centering bungee, pulling them evenly forward with pedals foot released. That bungee, installed years ago, is stretched out, leaving the rudder pedals and cable floppy loose. Not good.
That bungee is attached at the front of the pedal slider track and passes through cord locks on the backside of the OEM rudder line pulleys. As originally manufactured a length of cord ran from one rudder pedal, forward through a pully wheel, across under the deck, through another pulley and back to the pedal on the other side.
It worked to move both pedals equally and prevented the pedal sliders from accidentally falling off the back of the track, but it was not self-centering and I didn’t like the traverse underdeck line when stuffing in dry bags.
P5300010 by
Mike McCrea, on Flickr
Lacking a giraffe’s neck that bungee inspection and any underdeck work will be easiest with the Monarch elevated on tall sawhorses, so I can scoot underneath and face my work. Time to stick my head inside the Monarch. God bless the 4’ tall sawhorses.
P5300021 by
Mike McCrea, on Flickr
And bless the wheeled shop chair. Travelling from workbench to under the decks I barely need to duck. Push off from the bench with tool in hand and roll under the hull facing my work at a comfortable height.
Need a different tool or part? Push off and glide back to the bench while still seated. I work no harder than needed; perfecting a flying 180 degree pivot while enroute came naturally.
That inspection proved maintenance was needed. I gave a tug one rudder bungee and it did a bad thing; the 30 year old pop rivet broke, and the bungee whapped the metal pulley back at my face. The deck pad eye above that pulley was barely held in place, better to discover that now in the shop than out on the water.
P5310026 by
Mike McCrea, on Flickr
Can’t complain, the Monarch is a 1992 hull. Can complain a little; the 31 year old pulley wheels are in surprisingly excellent condition, the OEM pulley installation, backing up SS pad eyes on the bow deck, was not well factory executed. Even the intact pulley was pop riveted cockeyed. Easy enough to drill out and replace the suspect pop rivets, and I don’t really need the pulleys.
I drilled them out but couldn’t execute an improved rudder bungee concept I was envisioning; I had a variety of leftover cord locks in shop, none strong enough to firmly hold the new self-centering bungee concept..
I know Sgt Knots crown spring cord locks have the grip necessary, I tested a half dozen different cord locks for grip strength and saltwater corrosion resistance, and the Sgt Knots crown spring cord locks were by far grip superior, and more corrosion resistant, than any others tested. And many of the tested cord locks tested were a never-again useless joke.
https://myccr.com/phpbbforum/viewtopic.php?f=20&t=48736But I used the last of those uber-strong Sgt Knots cord locks on the “universal” spray cover, actually ordered a 10 pack to finish that job.
https://myccr.com/phpbbforum/viewtopic. ... ts#p447191Life is too short to suffer bad cord locks. Another buy once-cry once purchase.
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B01N6 ... UTF8&psc=1I originally bought a 25 pack, found many uses including friend’s stuff, and bought a 10 pack to finish off the spray cover. I came up two short on the spray cover and settled for lesser cord locks at two attachment points. Seriously man, think ahead. I ordered 50 this time.
40 cents apiece? Worth it to never again be crappy cord lock frustrated.
Not arriving for a couple days, time to step away from the elevated and inverted Monarch and think about a redesign of tension-able rudder pedal bungees.
Shop confession. I could have sworn I bought a new pack of crown spring cord locks. I looked. I searched in every box of outfitting parts and pieces. Repeatedly, emptying the same boxes over and over and then searching places I would not have intentionally stored them. Nope, not in the epoxy box. Nope, not in the rope box. Nope, not in the refrigerator. But there was a cold beer; always check the fridge.
The same day the new supply arrived I found an unopened bag of 25 crown springs. In one of the outfitting boxes, the likeliest, most obvious one. A primary parts box I had checked a half dozen times. No wonder I didn’t see them, the bag was plainly visible, with a large font label “Sgt Knots Crown Spring Cord Lock, Black” facing out. I think the shop poltergeists are gaslighting me.
I won’t be needing high quality cord locks for a while and will be sending a handful to friends.