I was trying to refresh my memory of the orientation of Bell’s carry handles and looked through my collection of old Bell catalogs. Most of the catalogs do not show carry handles at all, and only one catalog has actual photographs of the canoes instead of grey shaded depictions.
The one catalog that does have photos, (undated, most Bell catalogs are undated) shows the carry handles only on a RX Wildfire photo. In that photo the little vee point on the carry handles each face towards the center of the boat.
The distinctive Bell thwarts with the little vee point are consistent; in solos the point faces away from the paddler, in tandems the point faces the nearest paddler seat, presumable for easier gear storage in the middle between thwarts and yoke.
I wouldn’t count on any of that as a factory built orientation guarantee; I have seen a couple of new canoes with the yoke installed backwards, including a carbon Bell from ORC. The worst factory miscue was an OT Northern Light solo; that canoe had a sliding seat/yoke combo, designed with the yoke curves at the back of the seat, to be used with the seat slid all the way forward. Not only was that seat put in yoke forward, the slider was positioned so that no matter which way the yoke faced the hull was badly imbalanced.
Bell’s catalogs over the years are the model of inconsistency; I have only the one catalog with photos, and one catalog has no depictions at all, just model names and specs. Really? Why even bother with a catalog?
On the plus side of Bell depictions a couple of the long skinny “From the Heart of Canoe Country” catalogs do show the canoe in a horizontal bow-on depiction with gunwale, max and various waterline measurements. And, more importantly to me, those catalogs show the shape of the hull bottom, something I wish every canoe company catalog illustrated. Bell was also pretty consistent in listing the length to waterline ratio, another important-to-me spec.
Hands down Wenonah has consistently produced the most informative catalog, and the older ones, up to at least 2008, all show the bow-on profile and bottom shape, and much more.
Really “informative”, the first 8 or 9 pages of a Wenonah catalog are all dedicated to explanations of materials, designs, rec/touring/cruising/expedition categories, cross sections, bottom shapes, chines and tumblehome vs flare explanations. Those Wenonah catalogs are the Cliff Notes of canoe design.
And Wenonah usually dates their catalogs on the front cover. I’d have a lot more Wenonah catalogs if I hadn’t given random selections to novices looking to buy a canoe, saying “Read all of this first. You may not buy a Wenonah, but you’ll understand a lot more about canoe design and materials”.
Yeah, I enjoy the occasional peek at old canoe company prose, sometimes the verbiage is akin to a J.Peterman catalog:
“It was risky; time was beyond tight. But the day was perfect and the opportunity not to be missed. Putting in a Fish Creek after lunch, running the Saranac Lakes, under the state bridge and down river to Oseetah and across Lake Flower to meet Jan for dinner in Saranac Lake. You fly past the tennis courts; there’s the landing”.
ID that make and model and you win gold braid for the epaulets on your PFD.