gregcope
Well-Known Member
Hi,
- I will need replace my wire->double braid 10mm halyards at some point.
- Ex-Solent boy once mentioned that on some of his halyards had dyneema for just the standing part and mouse-lines for the rest; saves money, weight aloft, and loads of cordage in the cockpit
- this works for my roller reefing Genoa!
- I only need 6mm Dyneema from a breaking strain POV
- My Clutches are 10-12mm
- Handling 10-12mm is best
- 6 to 12mm dilema ...
- I have spare halyards / topping lifts for emergencies
- Spiny Halyards can be really thin (stretch/breaking strain not an issue) until they get to handling/clutch
- Main has to be a slight compromise as I need to winch around 50% of the halyard, which is also roughly where the reefing points would be (ie from 50% hoist, the working end needs to be 10-12mm for handling, clutches and winches)
- Better stretch characteristics is good
- Thin is good as it is cheaper / reduce weight aloft
- I like splicing / have the tools / winter is here/coming (ie no sailing ... :-(
I have seen some clever halyards which are thin Dyneema for the standing part, spliced to Braid on Braid for the working end (see - Core-To-Core Bulk Splice on http://www.apsltd.com/c-1539-splicingservices-halyardssheetsguys.aspx) with an overlapping cover for the clutched/winched section.
Ie for the main you could have a section of thinner Dyneema for the in mast section that is never handled. The overlap could act as a cover to bolster the area that needs winching / handling. The end of the standing end could be cheap braid on braid that is only used for the initial hoist.
Only challenggette to the plan is instructions on how to do a 12 core to braid on braid splice with overlap as per the apsltd example.
Ideas/feedback?
- I will need replace my wire->double braid 10mm halyards at some point.
- Ex-Solent boy once mentioned that on some of his halyards had dyneema for just the standing part and mouse-lines for the rest; saves money, weight aloft, and loads of cordage in the cockpit
- this works for my roller reefing Genoa!
- I only need 6mm Dyneema from a breaking strain POV
- My Clutches are 10-12mm
- Handling 10-12mm is best
- 6 to 12mm dilema ...
- I have spare halyards / topping lifts for emergencies
- Spiny Halyards can be really thin (stretch/breaking strain not an issue) until they get to handling/clutch
- Main has to be a slight compromise as I need to winch around 50% of the halyard, which is also roughly where the reefing points would be (ie from 50% hoist, the working end needs to be 10-12mm for handling, clutches and winches)
- Better stretch characteristics is good
- Thin is good as it is cheaper / reduce weight aloft
- I like splicing / have the tools / winter is here/coming (ie no sailing ... :-(
I have seen some clever halyards which are thin Dyneema for the standing part, spliced to Braid on Braid for the working end (see - Core-To-Core Bulk Splice on http://www.apsltd.com/c-1539-splicingservices-halyardssheetsguys.aspx) with an overlapping cover for the clutched/winched section.
Ie for the main you could have a section of thinner Dyneema for the in mast section that is never handled. The overlap could act as a cover to bolster the area that needs winching / handling. The end of the standing end could be cheap braid on braid that is only used for the initial hoist.
Only challenggette to the plan is instructions on how to do a 12 core to braid on braid splice with overlap as per the apsltd example.
Ideas/feedback?