owen
Well-Known Member
I was wondering what suggestions there are for tying the dinghy painter on. It has the conventional one ring on each side and a central ring. thanks in advance
I use an anchor bend and it's never come undone, seizing does make it tidier. Of course an anchor bend is just another name for a fisherman's bend.Mine has a fisherman's bend with a seizing to prevent it working loose
There's me as a quickie simply passing painter through the ring and doing a bowline !! Which usually ends up lasting years !!
A friend tied his dingy painter to the guardrail of my boat using a Bowline. I told him it would come undone. He knew better.I was wondering what suggestions there are for tying the dinghy painter on. It has the conventional one ring on each side and a central ring. thanks in advance
A friend tied his dingy painter to the guardrail of my boat using a Bowline. I told him it would come undone. He knew better.
The following morning the dingy had disappeared.
Overnight the constant tugging and releasing of the dingy pulling at the painter had loosened the knot.
Plus the rope was far too thin polypropylene.
+1 !There's me as a quickie simply passing painter through the ring and doing a bowline !! Which usually ends up lasting years !!
A bowline shouldn't part, but it only takes a second to put an extra half-hitch with the tail for safety.Must have been shi***y bowline then ... the design of the bowline is supposed to have a reasonable free tail after the knot .... I can bet there are many others here that have had to do same as myself - unable to undo a Bowline - had to cut it off.
But of course if you use cheap builders shop PP rope - its so loose lay-up - it will never hold properly, whatever knot you use. .
If a bowline properly made and in good rope is so prone to falling apart - think of all those flogging / going about gennys that have the sheets so fastened ...