BlueSkyNick
Well-Known Member
I was once told that the best approach is to consider them as guide lines rather than guard wires, so they (consciously and sub-consciously) tell you where the side of the boat is.
I can remember sailing on a Twister in the 1960's, where the owner had stipulated no lifelines when it had been built by Uphams. He believed they gave a false sense of security. Well my opinion working on the foredeck was the opposite. I sailed with him once, never again. Trying to change a headsail with no support was a nightmare and the sails both ended in the water. Lifelines are a sensible piece of safety equipment, if you do not believe me, try removing yours and the go out for a sail in any weather.
I can remember sailing on a Twister in the 1960's, where the owner had stipulated no lifelines when it had been built by Uphams. He believed they gave a false sense of security. Well my opinion working on the foredeck was the opposite. I sailed with him once, never again. Trying to change a headsail with no support was a nightmare and the sails both ended in the water. Lifelines are a sensible piece of safety equipment, if you do not believe me, try removing yours and the go out for a sail in any weather.
Long ago I gave up on using wire for guard rails and substituted dyneema.
I like that idea. Is there any reason its not common practice?
Are plastic covered lifelines outlawed in the UK for racing? Are they OK on a cruising yacht?
Should the lifeline go from the bow to stern and be fixed at the push-pit and pull-pit or should it be "secured" at each stanchion (or at least every second one)
What does "restrained" mean in this case?Fixed each end, from pulpit to pushpit but restrained @ every stanchion.
... but restrained @ every stanchion.
What does "restrained" mean in this case?
I can see benefit in not allowing the line to run free through the stanchion but don't know how one would achieve that with a conventional set up
316 stainless steel pipe at 1 meter