Halo
Well-Known Member
Has anyone found a way to comfortably wear life jacket leg straps (as opposed to a crutch strap ) whilst wearing oiles ? I always seem to be hitching the things over my oily trousers and round the jacket.
I've found the twin leg strops to be uncomfortable so only have a single crotch strap now on all my life jackets.
Has anyone found a way to comfortably wear life jacket leg straps (as opposed to a crutch strap ) whilst wearing oiles ? I always seem to be hitching the things over my oily trousers and round the jacket.
+1I've found the twin leg strops to be uncomfortable so only have a single crotch strap now on all my life jackets.
Terrible things, single straps. You have to undo them to sit on the loo, as you sit the strap gently lowers into the pan![/QUOTE
Clip it around your waist.
We've mostly accepted a rubbish design which seems to have come about due to shortening the shoulder straps, raising the belt of the harness onto the wearer's chest.
I guess this saves a few pence worth of webbing?
May be some truth in that.Surely the higher the belt, the less you can slip down before your arms stop you and hence the lesser the need for crotch-straps? My jacket is a snug fit around my chest; I must admit I haven't tested it in the water (keep meaning to) but it really doesn't feel like I could slip down in it and so I haven't attached the optional strap.
I can think of two possible reasons, though they're just guesses.
One is that a short jacket is more comfortable when slumped on a cockpit seat (or even the rail of a racer). Your legs (and for some people, their pot-belly!) don't push up on the bottom of the jacket like they would if the "waist" belt were actually at waist level.
The other is that the harness part is now regulated by some kind of official standard, and it may be that this calls for straps to bear on the bony parts of the body rather than the soft abdomen, in the same way that car seatbelts are meant to bear on the pelvis and rib cage, not crush the stomach. That would lead to the lifejacket belt being placed higher up, against the chest rather than the waist.
Pete