Neeves
Well-Known Member
No, not a windlass!
What do you, variously, call a winch that uses chain and chain wheels/gypsies?
I do have one and call it, for want of another term a 'Chain winch'.
The device is normally used vertically (I'm contrary and usually use it horizontally), you attach one set of chain wheels to something substantial at the top and lift 'whatever' (usually on a big hook) at the bottom and the chain is endless and it all rattles as you apply tension. If you leave the chain not under tension - the load stays where you left it - it does not run back.
It is boaty, don't ask.
I recall from distant memory, secondary education, they had a 22:1 ratio - is this correct or do they vary? And from the same, defective, memory cells I thought the device had a name, other than 'chain winch'. The name might have been peculiarly Scots, possibly named after the company that made them, as we now use the word Hoover etc
Jonathan
What do you, variously, call a winch that uses chain and chain wheels/gypsies?
I do have one and call it, for want of another term a 'Chain winch'.
The device is normally used vertically (I'm contrary and usually use it horizontally), you attach one set of chain wheels to something substantial at the top and lift 'whatever' (usually on a big hook) at the bottom and the chain is endless and it all rattles as you apply tension. If you leave the chain not under tension - the load stays where you left it - it does not run back.
It is boaty, don't ask.
I recall from distant memory, secondary education, they had a 22:1 ratio - is this correct or do they vary? And from the same, defective, memory cells I thought the device had a name, other than 'chain winch'. The name might have been peculiarly Scots, possibly named after the company that made them, as we now use the word Hoover etc
Jonathan


