If I'm not mistaken, the piece of hardware in this post is totally different to that in the OP, which seems to depict a variation on the "clam cleat".
Oh, I see it now. The OP shows them in pairs in their original packaging. I took them to be some kind of clam cleat in that setting.No, it's the same shackle. Bignick is correct.
You can still buy them, it seems. Very cheaply from some sources.
So now I see one of the threaded onto the end of a piece of rope, what happens next?
So now I see one of the threaded onto the end of a piece of rope, what happens next?
Perhaps "bard" is a poetic typo of the word "barb"?I purchased some of these off eBay last year and sent an email to Lewmar customer support. I got the following response..
I am sorry to say that we are unable to find any instructions for these snap shackles, as parts have long since been obsolete, and last sold in 2014, if I remember the line goes in through the bottom, then around the inner piece then back down, there is a bard in there that hooks into the line.
i hadn’t spotted the small bard (spike) inside originally, but once I knew it was there it was self explanatory which way around the central plastic peg the rope must go. Tension on the line tightens the bitter end against the spike; it’s much more secure than it first appears, but you do have to use the line diameter specified on the packet. I put a short whipping on the line at the bitter end and trim it off just where it exits the shackle.
They seem pretty good so far, but i think they have largely been superseded by soft shackles. The advantage is they can be released quickly under a light load.
That makes sense.That’s it, they’re attached. You clip them onto stuff, just like you would if you had spliced a stainless snap shackle on to the end of your line. Would you like some pictures?
I got them for attaching lightweight spinnaker sheets which they seem fine for.
They would also be good for fender lines, if you were sailing with people who have trouble with knots.
I see what you did there…Perhaps "bard" is a poetic typo of the word "barb"?
I purchased some of these off eBay last year and sent an email to Lewmar customer support. I got the following response..
I am sorry to say that we are unable to find any instructions for these snap shackles, as parts have long since been obsolete, and last sold in 2014, if I remember the line goes in through the bottom, then around the inner piece then back down, there is a bard in there that hooks into the line.
i hadn’t spotted the small bard (spike) inside originally, but once I knew it was there it was self explanatory which way around the central plastic peg the rope must go. Tension on the line tightens the bitter end against the spike; it’s much more secure than it first appears, but you do have to use the line diameter specified on the packet. I put a short whipping on the line at the bitter end and trim it off just where it exits the shackle.
They seem pretty good so far, but i think they have largely been superseded by soft shackles. The advantage is they can be released quickly under a light load.