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Joe Joe is offline
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Default whipping or dipping?


Capt. JG wrote:
I have several lines on my boat that were whipped properly, and they're a
beautiful sight. However, when I replaced my fender lines recently, I dipped
the ends instead of taking the time to whip them. So far, it seems just
fine, the only difference seeming to be the asthetic.


Whipping by far, but I'd rather have a back splice myself, unless you
need to pull the lines bitter end thru a block.

Joe



http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Whipping_knot

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(http://tinyurl.com/ycx7os)

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Default whipping or dipping?

Joe,

I don't think I've ever seen a back splice in a woven line? How is it
done?


http://community.webtv.net/tassail/ILLDRINKTOTHAT


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Default whipping or dipping?


Thom Stewart wrote:
Joe,

I don't think I've ever seen a back splice in a woven line? How is it
done?


Same as chinese handcuffs, yet you back the core. Same way you do an
eye in braid yet remove the eye.

That's yacht rope anyway, i figured real sailors use 3 strand rope.

Joe

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Yeah Joe,
Real sailors use three strand HEMP! Joe it's time to come into this
century.


http://community.webtv.net/tassail/ILLDRINKTOTHAT


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Thom Stewart wrote:
Yeah Joe,
Real sailors use three strand HEMP! Joe it's time to come into this
century.


Hemp is tried and true..but I use nylon for sheets, cept the 100% jib
sheet it's big high tech, and the halyards they are stainless. I'm not
racing and like a bit of forgiveness. Nylons cheap and a pleasure to
work with.

Joe


http://community.webtv.net/tassail/ILLDRINKTOTHAT




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Default whipping or dipping?

Joe wrote:

Thom Stewart wrote:
Yeah Joe,
Real sailors use three strand HEMP! Joe it's time to come into this
century.


Hemp is tried and true..but I use nylon for sheets, cept the 100% jib
sheet it's big high tech, and the halyards they are stainless. I'm not
racing and like a bit of forgiveness. Nylons cheap and a pleasure to
work with.


Nylon for sheets? You must be mistaken, Dacron maybe but surely not
stretchy nylon.

Cheers
Marty
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Default whipping or dipping?


"Martin Baxter" wrote
| Nylon for sheets? You must be mistaken, Dacron maybe but surely not
| stretchy nylon.

Egyptian Cotton makes the best sheets. :-)

Cheers,
Ellen
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Default whipping or dipping?

Martin Baxter wrote:
Joe wrote:


Hemp is tried and true..but I use nylon for sheets, cept the 100% jib
sheet it's big high tech, and the halyards they are stainless. I'm not
racing and like a bit of forgiveness. Nylons cheap and a pleasure to
work with.


Nylon for sheets? You must be mistaken, Dacron maybe but surely not
stretchy nylon.


Nylon sheets? Yee gad. Joe is as ignorant about sailing as he is about
politics.

Ok folks, let's take it from the beginning:

Sheets, halyards, control lines: Stretch BAD!

Docklines, towlines: Stretch GOOD!


Don't use stretchy nylon for sheets, and don't use low stretch
polyester/dacron for docklines. The high-tech ultra low stretch cordage
(e.g. technora, dynema, et al) is a bit better than polyester in some
situations, expensive unnecessary overkill in others.

//Walt
 
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