Jackstay webbing

Plevier

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I've just bought some ready made jackstays in polyester webbing http://www.force4.co.uk/6113/Lalizas-7m-x-25mm-Jackstay--Pair-.html (brilliant service from Force 4 BTW - ordered in afternoon and they arrived next day).
Lalizas are a reputable company and presumably meet standards but I'm surprised how thin the webbing is. Force 4 don't know its breaking strength and the Lalizas catalogue doesn't say.
It's 25mm x 1.65mm. That's the same cross sectional area as a rope of just over 7mm dia. I don't know if this is a valid comparison, but 7mm Marlow Doublebraid - scaling it from the 6 and 8 as they don't do 7 - would be about 1200kg breaking load.
That sounds enough but - it just looks a bit flimsy!
What size webbing do others use please?
(Please don't suggest wire, I have tried it and prefer webbing.)

(Interesting comparison http://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/WEBBING-B...Textiles_SM&hash=item2a0f2349eb#ht_636wt_1110 claims 20kN for 25mm x 1.6mm webbing - maybe I'mbeing too cautious.)
 
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I think jackstays are usually rated at 2000kg which is pretty much the same as 20kn. You falling overboard and being dragged through the water or being swept overboard by a wave are unlikely to exert anything like 20kN/2000kg - I suspect at that force, you'd be more likely to be damaged by your harness.
 
I've just finished making my own jackstays and harness lanyards, and thats the size webbing I used. Single thickness for jackstay, and double thickness (sewn) with snaphooks each end for harness lanyards. The double thickness wasn't to increase the strength, rather the stiffness.
 
The breaking strain is not the issue here really. Imagine yourself with a small car hanging from your harness and you'll get the idea. The thing I don't trust is just as you said - the flimsiness. Aside from UV issue there's chafe and the risk of it going against a sharpish edge if you do go over the side. My thinking is that, by oversizing you're giving yourself a far larger safety margin. To put it another way a 5mm cut in 10mm webbing has done far more damage than a 5mm cut in 20mm webbing.
 
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