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Jonathan Ganz February 19th 04 09:06 PM

Lifelines
 
It's compromised, but hasn't yet failed. I much rather have a cut than
fall in the water.

"Bobsprit" wrote in message
...
A fishhook in an of itself, isn't a failure.


Yes it is. It means part of the line has FAILED and the line is

compromised
along with your ability to hold onto it.

RB




Jonathan Ganz February 19th 04 09:07 PM

Lifelines
 
HUH? Are you crazy?? Perhaps you're talking about JACKLINES????

"Dufus" wrote in message
. ..

"Jonathan Ganz" wrote in message
...
........, but then
you shouldn't be relying on them anyway. They're the grap of
last resort.


Actually, lifelines are for snapping you harness on when you have to leave
the cockpit offshore. Errr, well, Bobsprit wouldn't have to ever worry
about that anyway so he may as well replace his plastic coated wire cables
with decorative goldtone cord.





Jonathan Ganz February 19th 04 09:07 PM

Lifelines
 
As do most real sailors. But, I think Dufus made a typo.

wrote in message
...
On Thu, 19 Feb 2004 15:18:01 -0500, "Dufus" wrote:


"Jonathan Ganz" wrote in message
...
........, but then
you shouldn't be relying on them anyway. They're the grap of
last resort.


Actually, lifelines are for snapping you harness on when you have to

leave
the cockpit offshore.


They are? That sounds like a very bad idea to me! I have jack lines
for that purpose.

BB




Jonathan Ganz February 19th 04 09:10 PM

Lifelines
 
They are primary safety gear, but they should be used as a LAST RESORT.
Sort of like an Epirb.

"Bobsprit" wrote in message
...
Actually, lifelines are for snapping you harness on when you have to

leave
the cockpit offshore



Oops. Try JACKLINES. See my other post on the importance of lifelines as
PRIMARY safety gear.

RB




Joe February 19th 04 09:17 PM

Lifelines
 
(Bobsprit) wrote in message ...
A lot of boats have pulled off the plastic from the lifelines and it looks
better than the constantly dirty plastic.


Comet & a wet rag. Use it! Easy, fast, works. Give a crew member a
purpose.

What's the best method for getting it off? Blowdryer?


What are you talking about "getting off"? No way would you think that
a hairdryer is going to soften up lifeline coatings, or would you?

A razor used at the proper angle will skin one side of the coated
lifeline and it's quite easy to strip the rest off. I've recycled
coated SS lifelines and used them for the stays on the dink before.

I like hand rails myself. Then netting.

Joe
MSV RedCloud






RB


John Cairns February 19th 04 09:30 PM

Lifelines
 
I guess the name says it all, unless, of course, you want Bob to tether
himself to his "lifelines". The word you might be looking for is
"jacklines", lines that serve no other purpose than attachment points for
tethers.
John Cairns
"Dufus" wrote in message
. ..

"Jonathan Ganz" wrote in message
...
........, but then
you shouldn't be relying on them anyway. They're the grap of
last resort.


Actually, lifelines are for snapping you harness on when you have to leave
the cockpit offshore. Errr, well, Bobsprit wouldn't have to ever worry
about that anyway so he may as well replace his plastic coated wire cables
with decorative goldtone cord.





John Cairns February 19th 04 09:34 PM

Lifelines
 
So, when you go forward you crawl on your hands and knees? You really need
to spend some time offshore Bob.
John Cairns
"Bobsprit" wrote in message
...

Lifelines are very useful and important:
1) Working forward, stay low and they can and will catch you
2) If you take a fall from anywhere, accept over them, they can and will

catch you
RB




Jonathan Ganz February 19th 04 09:51 PM

Lifelines
 
Actually, I've done that several times, even in the bay. It can get pretty
rough.
Certainly off the coast also.

"John Cairns" wrote in message
...
So, when you go forward you crawl on your hands and knees? You really need
to spend some time offshore Bob.
John Cairns
"Bobsprit" wrote in message
...

Lifelines are very useful and important:
1) Working forward, stay low and they can and will catch you
2) If you take a fall from anywhere, accept over them, they can and will

catch you
RB






Jonathan Ganz February 19th 04 09:55 PM

Lifelines
 
Umm... sorry, but I think I need an interpreter... what does
"I'm suggestion that that is a total non-sequitur" mean?

"Dave" wrote in message
...
On Thu, 19 Feb 2004 13:06:33 -0800, "Jonathan Ganz"
said:

It's compromised, but hasn't yet failed. I much rather have a cut than
fall in the water.


You'd probably prefer to be rich but happy rather than poor but unhappy

too.
(In case you missed it, I'm suggestion that that is a total non-sequitur)

Dave
S/V Good Fortune
CS27




Jonathan Ganz February 19th 04 09:56 PM

Lifelines
 
Flamed? Nah, flamed would be something like "YOU STUPID F*CKING
ASSH*LE! GET OUT OF THIS NEWGROUP." :-)

"Dufus" wrote in message
.. .
You are correct, I was wrong. Gee, I learned something today even if I

did
get flamed for my ignorance.


wrote in message
...
On Thu, 19 Feb 2004 15:18:01 -0500, "Dufus" wrote:


"Jonathan Ganz" wrote in message
...
........, but then
you shouldn't be relying on them anyway. They're the grap of
last resort.


Actually, lifelines are for snapping you harness on when you have to

leave
the cockpit offshore.


They are? That sounds like a very bad idea to me! I have jack lines
for that purpose.

BB







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