Wansworth
Well-known member
Should I buy traditional sail tie material and tie a reef knot or should I go for straps with clicks joiny ends;even yacht owners have difficult problems to solve
Thanks,good idea about a loop,
I think the sail ties from Jimmy Green already have the loop formed.
Buy 3/4" or 1" webbing and put a small loop in one end. Personally I'd sew them (with a half-twist in the loop so it doesn't lie flat and hence stays open) because it looks neater, but an overhand knot with the doubled tape will work just as well.
Pass the tie round the sail, put the end through the hole, cinch up tight and tie a slipped half-hitch around the standing part.
I don't see any benefit to buckles - they don't provide the gathering-together that pulling the end through the loop does, unless you manually overhaul the tape through the open buckle first, and it always feels like there's a possibility of them popping apart if you pull too hard.
Pete
Should I buy traditional sail tie material and tie a reef knot or should I go for straps with clicks joiny ends;even yacht owners have difficult problems to solve
found lots of other uses for them too since I bulk purchased
Buy 3/4" or 1" webbing and put a small loop in one end. Personally I'd sew them (with a half-twist in the loop so it doesn't lie flat and hence stays open) because it looks neater, but an overhand knot with the doubled tape will work just as well.
Pass the tie round the sail, put the end through the hole, cinch up tight and tie a slipped half-hitch around the standing part.
I don't see any benefit to buckles - they don't provide the gathering-together that pulling the end through the loop does, unless you manually overhaul the tape through the open buckle first, and it always feels like there's a possibility of them popping apart if you pull too hard.
Pete
I believe that I am the last person left on earth to still use a single continuous line for tying down the mainsail. I tie the aft end from the cockpit when the sail comes down to stop it flopping past the lazyjacks and then continue the tie at my leisure. I have a simple technique involving a slip-knot at each node and have chosen a shiny line to enable this. I make no claims to this being any better than ties, but it's just what I have always done.
I use webbing with a loop in one end and secure with a slipped half hitch. I never use an ordinary half hitch since I tried to haul up the sail with a tie still on and found the hitch had jammed solid. Sometimes I will use it without the loop and tie it with a slipped reef knot. I like the softer webbing not the stiff webbing that some sailmakers supply.
David MH