TimBennet
Well-Known Member
Yep. Will now buy 20m of 16mm 3 strand nylon[\b] when next in a chandlery.
Now I have learned to splice, I will splice the hook onto it
Tudorsailor
How big is your boat? 16mm is really thick. You want the rope to stretch as much as possible so it needs to be loaded to at least half its breaking load.
If the rope in the bridle doesn't stretch, or the bridle isn't long enough for the stretch to be significant, then you might as well just have the chain.
Typically 3 strand nylon will stretch 35% at 75% of it's breaking strain and around 40 - 45% at breakage point.
So 16mm nylon has a breaking strain of over five and half tons, so you would need to be seeing two to three tons of load to be getting the most from your elasticity, which is highly unlikely.
The idea is to make a dynamic, springy, energy absorbing system where there are metres of movement in the bridle. If you secured this system to a midship or aft cleat during storm force or hurricane force winds, you would see a metre or so of backwards and forward motion through your fairleads and no amount of anti chafe would cope with that. So you need to attach it right at the bows where having most of the bridle in the water will help keep it cool and lubricated. Dry nylon gets hot when working! The energy absorbed has to go somewhere.
The rolling hitch is the best form of attachment. Much kinder to the chain and if the bridle does chafe through, you don't loose your shiny hook.