Boating

TOW MIRROR TIPS

A mirror will make you a better and safer wakeboat driver.

- —Zenon Bilas

AA mirror can be the captain’s most effective tool when participat­ing in wake sports. The driver can continue to face forward, and quickly look in the mirror and then back at the water ahead. This allows the captain to gain greater situationa­l awareness in terms of what is happening both in front of and behind the boat.

The mirror has been a standard feature on specialize­d wake-sports boats for the past 60 years, but it is not yet standard on other types of boats. Brands such as Attwood, Cipa, PTM Edge and Roswell offer mirrors in various shapes and sizes. The most common design attaches to the windshield frame, but manufactur­ers also make mirrors that mount to the dash, the plastic windscreen found on deck and bass boats, wakeboard towers, the hardtop of a center-console, and the fence rail of a pontoon boat. If your boat allows for it, the best place for the mirror is on the windshield, just to the left of the wheel. This puts the mirror above the heads of crew and provides for a symmetrica­l view behind the boat.

Mirrors can range in size from 2½-by-8 inches to 7-by-20 inches. A bigger mirror will take up more space but allows for a wider field of view. Mirrors also feature some curvature to the design, resulting in a more panoramic view. The combinatio­n of a mirror’s size and amount of glass curvature determines the field of view, which can range from 110 degrees to nearly 180 degrees. A wider view allows the driver to better see slalom skiers, wakeboard riders and tube riders when they swing out from the boat’s wake.

A mirror can range from $15 to $500. Cost factors include the size of the mirror, the complexity of the mirror’s bracket and mount design, and the quality of the glass. A more sophistica­ted bracket and mount allow for quicker mirror adjustment­s. A better mount also keeps the mirror more tightly affixed to the boat. Better glass provides the sharpest image. Your goal is to get the overall best quality your budget will allow.

Here are eight tips to maximize the use of this tool to make you a better and safer watersport­s captain. The more aware the driver is, the safer the tow-sports experience will be for everyone. Using a mirror achieves this. Once you have one, you will not want to tow without it again.

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