See also: helm-port

English edit

Alternative forms edit

Noun edit

helm port (plural helm ports)

  1. (historical, nautical) A hole through the counter of a ship, through which the rudderstock passes.
    • 1897, The Elementary Principles of Naval Architecture, page 273:
      The advantage arising from this form of rudder and mode of hanging it is this, that the hole through the counter or stern of the ship which is called the helm port, is wholly closed up by the head of the rudder passing through it, with almost a close joint, as the line of the centre of the pintles or hinges is made to pass through the centre of the rudder head, whereby the round head of the rudder becomes a large pintle before the fore side of the rudder head, and the rudder, necessarily working on the centre of the pintles, required that the hole through the counter of the ship for the reception of the head of the rudder should be made large enough to allow of the rudder working over with a radius equivalent to the diameter of the rudder head; the large helm port which was thence formed was found to be the source of leakage in the ship at all times, and, in the event of the loss of rudder at sea, the large aperture endangered the safety of the vessel.
    • 1968, Hans Jürgen Hansen, Art and the Seafarer, page 32:
      The 16th-century fluyts underwent yet another change: the cove, which we can see on Brueghel's engraving, and which had a helm port in it, through which the tiller entered the ship, disappeared.
    • 1989, Michael W. Marshall, Ocean traders, page 89:
      Towards the end of the century the size of the helm port on large ships was much reduced by bringing the head of the rudder inside the ship.