Unless I have misunderstood, the definition attached to the notice makes it clear - a monkeys fist comprised of the rope of the heaving line is allowed - anything additional is prohibited. There is no such thing as your suggestion of "usefully weighted".It would help if they defined what they mean by dangerously weighted heaving lines, with examples. At what point does a usefully weighted line become dangerous?
It is defined in the notice.It would help if they defined what they mean by dangerously weighted heaving lines, with examples. At what point does a usefully weighted line become dangerous?
When I was fish farming, I just assumed that trying to hit site staff with a mooring line with a shackle on the end was the national Norwegian sport.
Standard practice for NATO Underway Replenishment at Sea (RAS) Gunline attached to heavier messenger line etc. Brits. Used 303 then SLR then SA80. Steel rod described was replaced with a plastic projectile. Only dangerous if you didn't take cover!Having gone through various forms of getting lines across between ships .... (one ship transferring cargo to another - termed STS).
Weighted Monkeys Fist Heaving Line
Small Sand Bag on line
Plain rope Monkeys Fist
but the weirdest :
303 Rifle ... yes a Lee Enfield 303 ... modified to have a rod down the barrell and a Y yoke to 'rocket line'. Now THAT WAS DANGEROUS.
Old fashioned rifle based Rocket Line
replaced by the self contained plastic drum type.
The 'fired' lines went out of use and all back to manual heaving lines.
Best I ever saw was when I was Chevron at Pascagoula, Miss. We were a 40,000 MT vessel taking cargos from 300,000 ... 400,000 ton vessels into the refinery.
Philipino crew. One guy had the greatest range I have ever seen a line go ...
Standard heaving line, plain fist on end. He'd lay out about 1.5m and start swinging it round above his head ... as it went round - he'd feed in a bit more and bit more ....... till it was about 6 - 7m like a helicopter ..... WOMP WOMP WOMP as it went round - then he'd let her fly ...... amazing distances.
Material they use to make the curtains on lorry trailers?The sandbags used to be leather or canvas, is there a better modern fabric?