Plomong
Well-Known Member
Would the forum consider a running backstay to be part of the standing rigging ????
Answers on the back of an envelope, please !!!!
Plomong
Answers on the back of an envelope, please !!!!
Plomong
It helps support the mast, so standing rigging.
If it supported a sail or moveable boom, then running rigging.
How about standing is usually set, running you adjust as you sail?
Except that backstay tension gets adjusted quite frequently on some boats, including mine.
Would the forum consider a running backstay to be part of the standing rigging ????
Answers on the back of an envelope, please !!!!
Plomong
That's what I'm saying - is not a running back stay running rigging and a fixed back stay standing rigging?![]()
agreedThe backstay I adjust is not a running backstay, but THE backstay. A running backstay's role is stop the mast falling down, even though it is only used on one tack or gybe - thus, because it supports the mast, not the sails - it is standing rigging. Running rigging is attached to a sail, standing rigging to a mast. (IMHO)
Running rigging is necessary, standing rigging is not![]()
Running rigging is necessary, standing rigging is not![]()
Chapman's Pilotage has an interesting take on the subject. It defines standing rigging as the structure required to support the sails - including the mast. It says that because modern boats have adjustable standing rigging - backstay adjuster, for example - "the line between standing and running rigging is becoming blurred".
I'll go with standing rigging attaches to the mast, running rigging attaches to the sails.
What does that make a topping lift, though?
Topping lift is running rigging, it only passes thro a block on the mast (like a halliard) & does not fasten to or support the mast.
But many smaller boats have a topping lift attached to the masthead and adjusted at the end of the boom. Still, I'd always think of the topping lift as running rigging, even though it supports a spar and not a sail.