scrambledegg
Well-Known Member
My wife makes her own snubbed mooring lines by weaving in shock cord and that seems to be a good solution. Get a decent 3 ply rope which is suitable as a mooring line for your boat and a yard or two of medium thickness shock core. Cut the shock cord into three equal lengths then, using a fid or suitable tool, weave it into the lay of the rope. I don't have any pictures here, so you'll have to use some imagination - leave enough rope to attach to your cleat on the boat and get past the fairlead, then slip one end of the shock cord under one of the plies of the rope. Work your way along the rope weaving the shock cord in, going over one ply and under the next - all in a straight line along the rope. Then turn it through a third of a turn and weave in another length of shock cord, then do it all over again with the third length. Tidy up the ends of the shock cord, then whip or tape over them to keep everything neat and in place. The result is a very strong snubbed line - the shock cord slightly expands the lay of the rope and when the rope is placed under load, the rubber of the cord is compressed, allowing the rope to stretch by a fraction of an inch. The impact on the strength of the rope is minimal and it remains a general purpose line unlike lines which have those great big lumps of rubber hooked onto them. You can adjust the amount of give in the rope by adjusting the length and thickness of shock cord that you weave in.
These days, my wife can do one from scratch in about ten minutes. We have shown other people how to do it and we've seen others make more decorative versions with more complex weaving patterns - personally, I think life is too short for that - the approach above takes the jerk off your cleat, greatly reduces the noise and does it all in ten minutes at an extra expense of a couple of pounds over the price of a basic mooring line.
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