Yeah, it surprised me how short the tiller was. I constructed it just as the design described it, but this was one of Dudley Dix’s early designs, I believe. It’s the Argie 15.
I did make one change early in the life of this boat: the tiller definitely swivels up and down now!
Apologies for the late response. I hadn’t posted any rules yet, but I’m certainly open to suggestions.
I’d like to lean in the direction of less than more on the rules and then deal with problems as they come up.
I’ll modify the description to include some brief rules, and then we probably need to bring it up for discussion at some point. Provided we start to see some traffic.
[Full disclosure: I’m a director at a large software company (not ESRI!), and I’m not entirely sure our own HR department includes pay range in all their job postings – although that may be changing right now with various rule changes at the state level in the US.]
Edgar Rice Burroughs’ John Carter books are public domain. They’ve got those on Project Gutenberg, but they may be too much “stock characters” for you.
Would some of the Lewis Carroll stuff scratch the “science fiction” itch?
It’s a bit of a stretch, but Mark Twain’s Connecticut Yankee in King Arthur’s Court at least has the character development. And, strictly speaking, it is time travel. ;)
Finally, if quasi-fantasy and mythopeia do anything for you, there are things like George Macdonald’s Phantastes and G. K. Chesterton’s The Man Who Was Thursday. Both those authors were influences on C. S. Lewis. But we’re really straying away from anything that’s strictly science fiction there.
RedHat here in the late 90s, back when you could still find yourself writing a “modeline.”
Then Debian in the early 00s when apt was still a major discriminator. Finally, Ubuntu around 2008 just so I was running the same thing I was recommending to family members for ease of use. (At the time, Ubuntu sported the same ease of installation and hardware detection I’d found with Knoppix.)
Now on Xubuntu, but seriously eyeing a return to Debian.
Yep! It took about 6-9 months the summer of 2021. It’s a rough ride, and I’m not always thrilled with the performance. If it breaks, though, I get to keep all the pieces, and sometimes I even know how to put them back together!
The design was chosen because it was about as big as I could get and still fit it on a trailer in the garage.