Seajet
...
I have never known a moused shackle come undone on anyone else's, let alone my mooring.
One point I meant to mention, which I discovered the hard way.
If using a rope strop beware of it looping over the buoy when the boat drifts up to it, this usually happens in light wind over tide.
The rope is then wrapped round and under the buoy and up against the razor sharp barnacles likely to be there; at HISC I found a 20mm nylon strop was usually chafed enough to be discarded after 3 months.
Personally I think there's very little elasticity to take the shock out of waves in a short thick length of nylon like a mooring strop; in reality the damping in strong winds is done by the weight of the floating buoy and its mooring chain.
I'll just mention again, swivels are usually the weakest link and the reason for most of the mooring failures I've seen, keep an eye on them !
One point I meant to mention, which I discovered the hard way.
If using a rope strop beware of it looping over the buoy when the boat drifts up to it, this usually happens in light wind over tide.
The rope is then wrapped round and under the buoy and up against the razor sharp barnacles likely to be there; at HISC I found a 20mm nylon strop was usually chafed enough to be discarded after 3 months.
Personally I think there's very little elasticity to take the shock out of waves in a short thick length of nylon like a mooring strop; in reality the damping in strong winds is done by the weight of the floating buoy and its mooring chain.
I'll just mention again, swivels are usually the weakest link and the reason for most of the mooring failures I've seen, keep an eye on them !