Roberto
Well-known member
The mooring setup in my home port for example (and most other ports around here) is a short finger in slightly diagonal position, about 1/4 of the aft part of the boat remains behind the end of the finger (which is only tied by a spring, no stern transverse line), this means all fenders have to be concentrated in say a couple of meters which is the contact area between hull and finger pontoon, they are basically useless anywhere else -except of course the opposite side of the boat, I have 6 to 8 fenders almost in contact to each other and there is only one maybe two stanchions along the area.We tie fenders to the base of the stanchions and base of pulpit, pushpit. We use a cross section of fenders - 'normal' long fenders and spherical fenders. We also use a fender board - I made one from a long length of marine ply with closed cell foam on the 'hull' side.
During wintering I tie about a half of them to the guard rail holes and a half to the lifeline as they work differently when the boat is heeled by strong winds and compresses them; during summer I usually tie them all to the lifeline as it is a lot more practical than feeding every single fender line through the rail holes (and untying as one leaves). Steel wire is stiff and accepts rope knots without problems, I guess one should keep the dyneema extremely taut to achieve the same stiffness.
I have a length of 6mm dyneema and my upper steel wires are due for replacement so I may give the dyneema a try.