Greenheart
Well-Known Member
This is a daft question, because I suspect it's like asking whether food is safe to eat, one day after the expiry date...
...but maybe there's some good reason I don't know about.
Looking at blocks for sale in the majority of chandlers, or from the manufacturers themselves, surprisingly few models are offered as being suitable for thicker sheets than 14mm...
...which seems surprising, when the same stores sell, for example, 20mm Marlowbraid line. Where do big-yacht owners find blocks to run this rope through?
I found a little old Holt Allen 4380 block in the back of a drawer, and it easily carries 10mm braided line without any problem, or even the slightest abrasive wear. Yet the website states that the thickest line recommended is only 8mm. Why would the maker limit its use?
Likewise, Barton's size 7 blocks...the sheaves are 20mm thick, so the space will be a clear 22mm, yet the advised maximum diameter line is only 14mm. Why? I certainly used a much smaller Barton size 4 with 14mm line, for years, without any noticeable wear...
...yet these limits seem to apply to all the manufacturers' products. Selden, Harken, you name it.
I prefer thick sheets - much less of an ordeal to keep a grip on, under tension. So naturally I'd need bigger blocks than are standard on dinghies...but is there a good reason not to use thicker line than the makers recommend, when there is clearly space to do so?
...but maybe there's some good reason I don't know about.
Looking at blocks for sale in the majority of chandlers, or from the manufacturers themselves, surprisingly few models are offered as being suitable for thicker sheets than 14mm...
...which seems surprising, when the same stores sell, for example, 20mm Marlowbraid line. Where do big-yacht owners find blocks to run this rope through?
I found a little old Holt Allen 4380 block in the back of a drawer, and it easily carries 10mm braided line without any problem, or even the slightest abrasive wear. Yet the website states that the thickest line recommended is only 8mm. Why would the maker limit its use?
Likewise, Barton's size 7 blocks...the sheaves are 20mm thick, so the space will be a clear 22mm, yet the advised maximum diameter line is only 14mm. Why? I certainly used a much smaller Barton size 4 with 14mm line, for years, without any noticeable wear...
...yet these limits seem to apply to all the manufacturers' products. Selden, Harken, you name it.
I prefer thick sheets - much less of an ordeal to keep a grip on, under tension. So naturally I'd need bigger blocks than are standard on dinghies...but is there a good reason not to use thicker line than the makers recommend, when there is clearly space to do so?