Boundary Waters Quetico Forum :: Gear Forum :: Solo seat placement
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sns |
EDIT: ....and that old thread on solo outfitting was well worth the read. |
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timf1981 |
Its been on 5 solo trips. Plenty of room to slide those pack forward and rear to get the nose pointed up wind or down. With a destination in mind i can travel at 4-4.25 mph. Last spring i took a prism on a 4 day trip. I thought i would get used to the sketchiness. Never did. This year i will be converting a MN2 to a solo. Hopefully i will be able to put a sliding seat in and keep the current standard portage yolk |
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amhacker22 |
I’m probably going with 6 inches back. It looks like it belongs there. I’ll let you know how it goes. |
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justpaddlin |
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sns |
Front edge of the seat on my NS Magic is more like 3.5" behind center. It's possible that the Trillium placement was not "stock", but the Magic for sure is. |
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amhacker22 |
I just got the Northstar seat drops, and I’m going to start with full length. I think 6 inches is the number. It looks right, and that leaves the footbrace just shy of the front thwart. Im looking forward to giving this a try. |
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justpaddlin |
feet overall. The seat is contoured in the plan view so I think it's effectively 7-8 inches behind center and maybe closer to 7. I think I was too quick to assume that 9 inches was normal from a few measurements taken in the past. On sns' Magic, I wonder if it's closer to center because it's a sitting boat and sitting vs kneeling puts your weight further back. Your six inch plan might be just right. |
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Knoozer |
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amhacker22 |
I’m installing a seat and a foot brace on a cedar strip Original Merlin solo canoe. I’m just wondering about how far back of center you all like your solo seat. I’m thinking about 6 inches, but I’d love to get your thoughts. Also, I ordered this from Northstar canoe yesterday. It’s here today with standard shipping. Well done, Northstar! Thanks, everyone! |
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sedges |
This thread has a lot of good ideas. I have always had a movable seat in my solos. It sometimes difficult to adjust trim with just packs or dogs or for a better way in the wind. My current solution is parallel rails to attach both seat and yoke. My part of the above thread is toward the bottom. Here is my MR Indy ready to portage. Many more pics in the thread. |
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sedges |
The concept does work well on the water and at the portage landing. I've set up 4 solos this way over the years. The first was a woodstrip based on a Rushton design. It had a fixed yoke and the seat was too far back AND still too crowded with the yoke. I built the rail system before a 10 day Quetico solo with lots of portaging. It worked so good that I modified all the solos that came after - the Mad River Independent, a Dagger Sojourn and a woodstrip William English Model 20 set up solo for a big, heavy paddler. It takes a lot of attention to lay out and measurements, but it is really quite simple. |