Rhylsailer99
Well-Known Member
Are the R clips ok on the pins on the forestay or should I stick to split pins
Where are they? Clevis pins?What's the opinion of folks on split pins on bottle screws. Open to 15 degrees or wrap them around?
Use a split pin and fold the legs back. not just prise apart slightly.
that's what I thought I bought some 3.2mm 20mm a4 split pins on eBay last night for 10mm pins , I'm hoping I bought the correct size.Use split pins on rigging. R clips are for something else
I still don't know why, but remember sitting outboard on the sliding seat of a Hornet and seeing the leeside stay drop off the eye, the clevis pin just hung in the shackle. We managed to luff up sufficiently for me to creep across and retrieve it. I suppose the split pin was left out.The official engineering advice is to open the legs 15 degrees only. In safety critical situations this is enforced. At a nuclear power station I used to work at there was an opening angle measuring device. For boat rigging, if replaced every time and not reused, I doubt it matters much. I don't suppose there are any reported examples of masts falling down because a split pin was opened beyond the manufacturer's specification.
The official engineering advice is to open the legs 15 degrees only. In safety critical situations this is enforced. At a nuclear power station I used to work at there was an opening angle measuring device. For boat rigging, if replaced every time and not reused, I doubt it matters much. I don't suppose there are any reported examples of masts falling down because a split pin was opened beyond the manufacturer's specification.
I expect human error leading to a pin being forgotten to be installed in the first place (like Fisherman's example) is a much more likely failure mode than the pin failing because it's been bent too far or accidently straightened by bumping something and then falling out because it wasn't bent far enough.Not in my industry it is not, fold back is the recommendation, so I guess it depends. The type of hoisting and lifting performed on rigs, tends to have lifting equipment running over bumper bars and deflection bars, so contact with fixed structures is likely. hence the added security of bending back.
See page 17 https://www.dropsonline.org/assets/documents/ReliableSecuringREV04.pdf
I like R clips - they're easy to clip, and easy to unclip. Split rings too - no nasty sharp bits.
I hate split pins - nasty sharp things that are a pain to remove when you need to.
But for a forestay - split pin every time. That's something that you really don't want coming undone in an unplanned manner.
I had a few days on a friends boat last year, walked around the deck checking things and noticed a missing split pin on the after lower shroud. Fortunately the nearby chandlery had some split pins. No idea how long it had been missing but he had just come round from the East Coast to Dartmouth! Split pin fully wrapped around and taped up with amalgamating tape.
One of the most useful things on my boat is a pair of digital callipers - it's reduced the number of wrong-size purchases!I bought some 3.2mm 20mm a4 split pins on eBay last night for 10mm pins , I'm hoping I bought the correct size.