Frayed Knot
Well-Known Member
How about nail varnish? If you’re sneaky enough there may be a ready supply, in many colours, very close to home…
Cotton is one of the most biodegradable fabrics we have, so aside from virtue signalling on forums would be a fairly poor choice as it will be gone in about 5 months if it gets wet or sees sunlight. Sometimes plastics are a good solution.
How about a Crosby link every 5m?
Only kidding.
My chain has a strip of ribbon at 15m (I’ve never let out <15m so why mark at 5 & 10?)
2 strips @ 20.
3 @ 30.
4 @ 40.
A length of cord @ 50 as that’s approaching the bitter end.
Having observed my other half using it, yes it's massively tougher but no it doesn't stick better. As such it doesn't chip but falls off as a single piece. For your purposes drying time isn't a problem and toughness is probably a bad thing so standard cheap stuff would be superior.Anyone out there with UV cured nail varnish? What are its advantages.
I did and then I checked and 'enamel' - in terms of paint has whatever meaning you want. ie its meaningless and I assumed you would be able to be more erudite and provide detail of its technical advantages.
One characteristic of enamel was that it was hard - you don't want hard (like glass (which is what enamel was) as it chips especially when applied to chain which needs toughness - not hardness - it needs some 'give' or yield.
Jonathan
Don't know why yours only lasted 5 months. My cotton ribbon is still on the chain after 2 years and there is no sign of it causing the chain to corrode. I use 40cm lengths of ribbon, folded in half and cow-hitched to one chain link so leaving two short tails. No problem with the gypsy.Cotton is one of the most biodegradable fabrics we have, so aside from virtue signalling on forums would be a fairly poor choice as it will be gone in about 5 months if it gets wet or sees sunlight. Sometimes plastics are a good solution.
If you Google cotton biodegradable all the info is there. Natural fibres biodegrade, it's one of the good things about them when you don't want them to last forever. Chain markers are more useful if they don't biodegrade, same reason we don't often see natural fibre sails or ropes these days.Don't know why yours only lasted 5 months. My cotton ribbon is still on the chain after 2 years and there is no sign of it causing the chain to corrode. I use 40cm lengths of ribbon, folded in half and cow-hitched to one chain link so leaving two short tails. No problem with the gypsy.
www.solocoastalsailing.co.uk
Here is a link to the blog of someone who favours webbing tabs, but interestingly, one of the replies reports corrosion to their chain under fabric tabs:The trick with painting is to find and easy way to do it.
Get a big, shallow cardboard box and drape the chain across, notching the edge for the chain. The sections to be marked hang inside the box and are easily marked on both sides. The mess stays in the box, throw the box away when dry. Easily done on deck with no mess.
The other trick is not to over-mark. There is no need for marks closer than 10-20 meters and no need for the first mark before 20 meters. You should only have a few spots to mark.
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Fabric and plastic seems to vary with the windlass. I had one that like fabric fine and they really lasted, and the next would jam on anything in a heartbeat. some bottoms abraid paint, some don't. Some power down and really don't need marks, assuming they can count. Experiences are not universal, so do what works with your equipment.
How do you know he keeps his underpants dry and indoors?If you Google cotton biodegradable all the info is there. Natural fibres biodegrade, it's one of the good things about them when you don't want them to last forever. Chain markers are more useful if they don't biodegrade, same reason we don't often see natural fibre sails or ropes these days.
If you keep your boat dry and indoors then cotton will obviously last as long as your underpants do.
I don't even know he's a he!How do you know he keeps his underpants dry and indoors?![]()
And have the advantage you can feel them passing out at night. Ties go through the winch no probs. Leave the tails on.Different coloured cable ties are easier to replace than touching up a worn out paint job while at anchor
And have the advantage you can feel them passing out at night. Ties go through the winch no probs. Leave the tails on.
How about nail varnish? If you’re sneaky enough there may be a ready supply, in many colours, very close to home…
Why mark it when you can hand over hand knowing that each length is about 1.5m