What size mooring warps?

wazza

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Our boat weighs around 7 tons. I'm going to be buying 4 new dockline mooring warps for our pontoon marina berth, my question being what size do you think I should get??

14mm@ 3550kgs
16mm@ 4750kgs
18mm@ 6100kgs

I'm thinking 16mm is good, 18mm overkill and 14mm is sufficent or......
 

sailorman

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Our boat weighs around 7 tons. I'm going to be buying 4 new dockline mooring warps for our pontoon marina berth, my question being what size do you think I should get??

14mm@ 3550kgs
16mm@ 4750kgs
18mm@ 6100kgs

I'm thinking 16mm is good, 18mm overkill and 14mm is sufficent or......

i think your assumptions are ok
 

westernman

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Chafe is the danger for mooring ropes. I would go for as big as you can get through your fairleads, tied to cleats etc.

Having chafed through 5 warps two years ago I went and bought a 220m reel of 22mm. This is lasting very well and I also now have the critical chafe points protected with fire hose.
 

Coaster

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Our current 14mm mooring lines are now 3 years old. The 34' boat, true displacement in use about 8 tons, is in the water for 8 months of the year. There is very little chafe evident on the lines.

14mm mooring lines are easier than larger sizes, to handle and stow.

We use 2 bow lines, 1 stern line, 1 spring from boat centre cleat to finger pontoon end cleat and 1 line from boat centre cleat to finger pontoon cleat continuing on to bow cleat, effectively 6 lines in total.

Our marina berth is sheltered. It might be a very different story in a different location.
 

Tranona

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14mm is sufficient from a strength point of view. As others have said it is chafe that is the problem - that is losing strength by wearing through at critical points. If your berth is exposed and you get a lot of movement is worth considering using snubbers of some sort.
 

ukmctc

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If its chaff then put some plastic hose at the point of chaff and that'll sort that.
My boat is 11 ton, Moody 33 MK1 and I use 14 mm mooring lines with no problem.

I have 4 x 10m, 2 x 30m, 1 x 50m and that covers most mooring in dock/harbour or marina that I have came across. They have held in all weather including F10 in Shetland with no problems.
 

wazza

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11 tons for a Moody 33.. blimmey
.. We have a Najad 343 & she weighs 6.5-7 ton, and we've had 20mm standard warp so the cleats are ok, we are pretty sheltered:) I'm buying these warps called "docklines" but will put snubbers on them anyway..

Thanks for everyone's input:)
 

Tranona

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11 tons for a Moody 33.. blimmey

Thanks for everyone's input:)

Think he is referring to its registered tonnage, which as you no doubt know is not connected with displacement/weight. Expect it displaces around 5-6 ton(ne)s
 

VicS

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Think he is referring to its registered tonnage, which as you no doubt know is not connected with displacement/weight. Expect it displaces around 5-6 ton(ne)s

Absolutely. Displacement of 4.69 tons according to my book.
 

KenMcCulloch

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With a bit over 8 tons displacement we also use 14/16mm lines. In the recent extreme weather (3rd January) two very substantial warps broke, not through chafe (although that may have contrubuted to some extent) but overload. One at a sharp turn through an enclosed fairlead, the other at the pontoon cleat. The rope near the point of failure had the 3 strands 'welded' by the heat and pressure created under breaking load conditions. I have never seen warps break before and I don't think there is anything wron with our / your thinking about appropriate sizes, my cautionary tale is simply that.
 

srah1953

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With a bit over 8 tons displacement we also use 14/16mm lines. In the recent extreme weather (3rd January) two very substantial warps broke, not through chafe (although that may have contrubuted to some extent) but overload. One at a sharp turn through an enclosed fairlead, the other at the pontoon cleat. The rope near the point of failure had the 3 strands 'welded' by the heat and pressure created under breaking load conditions. I have never seen warps break before and I don't think there is anything wron with our / your thinking about appropriate sizes, my cautionary tale is simply that.

I have a theory that if one used two lines at each mooring point, with one being a much smaller diameter than the "main" mooring warp, with this light line being shorter than main line so that it will stretch a lot and absorb a lot of the pressure before the main line is called upon.
No doubt someone will put me right!
 
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