Halyard knots

coveman

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Just wondering which knots, the experienced on the forum, use for attaching the head of a genoa or mainsail to their respective halyards?
 
I used to use a bowline but started using the Halyard knot as it's shorter and allows a higher hoist. Downside is that it's more difficult or impossible to untie so you may have to cut a few inches off your halyard each year.
 
I used to use a bowline but started using the Halyard knot as it's shorter and allows a higher hoist. Downside is that it's more difficult or impossible to untie so you may have to cut a few inches off your halyard each year.

Selden "halyard knot" onto a shackle with captive pin. I don't consider the need to cut the knot as a downside - there's no real need to remove the shackle in the first place, but in any case it's a good thing to shorten the rope a few inches periodically so that the wear of the clutch (and to a lesser extent the blocks) falls on a different area.

Pete
 
Eye splice on a captive shackle - no problem with cutting as the halyard never comes off the boat.

For dinghy halyards we use a bobble knot (not sure of technical name) - bobble (or stopper) on the end of the halyard, push a bight through the eye in the sail and put the bobble through the bight. This has the advantage of not taking up any space above the sail, but would probably be impossible to untie after tightening with a winch.
 
I use a halyard knot. When enthusiastic about splicing double braid I used to put an eye splice in halyards but came to regret it because it is then fixed but even worse I found that the tail of the splice was jamming in the sheave at the masthead.
David Morgan
 
Halyard knot to captive-pin shackle on main & foresail.
Halyard knot to swivel snapshackle for Spinnaker & Cruising chute.
All 10mm Dyneema.
No problems undoing them each year to put in washing machine & end-for end & shortening where worn.

Hope this helps
 
Halyard knot to captive-pin shackle on main & foresail.
Halyard knot to swivel snapshackle for Spinnaker & Cruising chute.
All 10mm Dyneema.
No problems undoing them each year to put in washing machine & end-for end & shortening where worn.

Hope this helps

+1

and also use halyard knot on our bridle arms.

'My' Halyard knots has 3 turns rather than 2 (as shown in the 'animated knots')
 
That's the reason I switched to the halyard knot - my previous bowline/shackle fouled the sheave before I had any tension on my luff.
My genoa halyard is 10 mm Dyneema, the halyard knot works well with that. In my case splices and bowline are not an option as the upper swivel is very close to the sheave.
 
Halyard knot onto the shortest shackle which will do the job.
Agreed: you don't want the mainsail and halyard semi-permanently attached, and the Selden type knot is much smaller than a bowline and totally reliable once pulled up tight. You have to cut it to undo. I tend to buy halyards a couple of metres oversize and shorten the top end slightly every couple of years - moves the wear points at masthead and clutch.
 
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