Bobc
Well-known member
Chuck them in a plasterers bucket with hot water and Dreft, and leave them in there for a few days.
That wont remove sand and dust, and there sure a lot of that onboard where we areChuck them in a plasterers bucket with hot water and Dreft, and leave them in there for a few days.
Won't they shrink in a hot wash?Chuck them in a plasterers bucket with hot water and Dreft, and leave them in there for a few days.
I treat all my ropes the same, three strand, braid on braid and high modulus: 30°, delicate cycle, spin and I see no ill effects. The Dyneema ropes are five years old and look and feel like new coming out of the washing machine.Can I add a question about washing high modulus ropes?
Stops the ropes causing any damage to the machine, however remote that night be.What's with the pillow case? Do they all go in one or one each? I could understand one each to save the tangling but then the wash would be less effective. Sounds like an old wives tale to me.
I like untangling them. Very satisfying. I grew up in a family of knitters and where things were undone and repurposed.So do I and been doing so for 40 years now. Untangling is a PITA but not found a way round it .
If this launderette is anywhere near a marina, almost certainly they forbid putting ropes in machines!Why not use the local launderette for washing them. That does save some hassle with the wife. But one still needs the pillow case.
Fresh water wont remove the green mould that seems to afflict my jib sheets. As sheets and halliards are perhaps 4 times oversize cross section to enable easy handling (with or without winch), the loss of strength resulting from removal of built in lubricant is probably of no great significance. What is of significance is removal of dust and salt that can abrade the ropeJust use fresh water, Don't use any soap or washing powder, it washes away the built- in lubricant that enables the fibres to slide over each other and stretch, otherwise heat builds up and they break. Read the directions from English Braids. And don't spin, just hang up to dry.
I too have heard that some modern ropes can be damaged by machine washing, with the inner locking out of the cover. Older low tech ropes seem to be fine.It had been suggested previously on this forum that with braid on braid the action of the washing machine can loosen the inner core.
I just use a bucket, with pure soap flakes, then a couple of rinses and hang up to dry, after which stored in string bags so there is a good air flow around them until,the next season.
Have followed this procedure on my halyards for years, they obviously don’t look brand new but after 15 years they are still perfectly serviceable.