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#1
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On 11 Jun 2005 15:10:16 -0700, "beaufortnc"
wrote: The stunsail tackbend looks a lot like a clove hitch. Different knot, same name - or is it a different knot? Thanks, Mike. As you can see from this representation, the knot is made the same way as a clove hitch. http://www.wellesley.edu/Athletics/PE/sailing/sailing_knot_mainsheet.html Brian Whatcott Altus, OK |
#2
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This site is interesting. I have try the stunsail knot.
I see some use for it on a dinghy sailboat. However I feel more comfortable with the bowline knot on larger boats. While not as nice as the stunsail the bowline is more secure. Maybe with time I'll get use to a stunsail knot and appreciate it more. "Brian Whatcott" wrote in message ... On 11 Jun 2005 15:10:16 -0700, "beaufortnc" wrote: The stunsail tackbend looks a lot like a clove hitch. http://www.wellesley.edu/Athletics/PE/sailing/ This site is interesting. I have try the stunsail knot. Different knot, same name - or is it a different knot? Thanks, Mike. As you can see from this representation, the knot is made the same way as a clove hitch. http://www.wellesley.edu/Athletics/PE/sailing/sailing_knot_mainsheet.html Brian Whatcott Altus, OK |
#3
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Denis Marier wrote:
This site is interesting. I have try the stunsail knot. I see some use for it on a dinghy sailboat. However I feel more comfortable with the bowline knot on larger boats. While not as nice as the stunsail the bowline is more secure. Maybe with time I'll get use to a stunsail knot and appreciate it more. You should definitely use the knots you're comfortable with. The most important thing about any knot is its predictability. This is why my wife's knot tying scares me - her bowlines seems to come out different every time! I would, however, disagree about the bowline being more secure. It a bit vulnerable to coming apart if severely flogged, especially if not well finished. Also, when used on a halyard, whether to a shackle or directly to the head, a small loop will be left - this can prevent the sail from be hoisted all the way. In addition, whenever a bowline is tied on a small object, like a shackle or headboard, it will suffer chafe because it is free to move around. A proper end hitch, like the stunsail tackbend or anchor bend is better for this type of attachment. I've used the stunsail tackbend as one of my primary knots for 40 years now, along with a bowline, tautline, and figure eight (and lots more - I was a knot geek before I learned to sail!) and I've never known one to fail, whether on small line or large. |
#4
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I have to replace my main and jib halyard. My old one have the shackles
threaded to a nice spliced loop. It looks very nice. As for the new halyards, I am not skillful at splicing and I thinking of using a knot to install the shackles. At first I was thinking of using the bowline. After reading your reply I am considering the stunsail knot. I am apprehensive that if one day the knot gets loose and the halyard gets out of the mast it will be a tenuous job to run the halyard inside the mast. "Jeff" wrote in message ... Denis Marier wrote: This site is interesting. I have try the stunsail knot. I see some use for it on a dinghy sailboat. However I feel more comfortable with the bowline knot on larger boats. While not as nice as the stunsail the bowline is more secure. Maybe with time I'll get use to a stunsail knot and appreciate it more. You should definitely use the knots you're comfortable with. The most important thing about any knot is its predictability. This is why my wife's knot tying scares me - her bowlines seems to come out different every time! I would, however, disagree about the bowline being more secure. It a bit vulnerable to coming apart if severely flogged, especially if not well finished. Also, when used on a halyard, whether to a shackle or directly to the head, a small loop will be left - this can prevent the sail from be hoisted all the way. In addition, whenever a bowline is tied on a small object, like a shackle or headboard, it will suffer chafe because it is free to move around. A proper end hitch, like the stunsail tackbend or anchor bend is better for this type of attachment. I've used the stunsail tackbend as one of my primary knots for 40 years now, along with a bowline, tautline, and figure eight (and lots more - I was a knot geek before I learned to sail!) and I've never known one to fail, whether on small line or large. |
#5
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If you knew exactly what was going on inside those splices, the know
wouldn't look so unreliable. It's all just friction. If you are letting your halyards flog around enough that there is any risk of a knot like that getting loose, you are doing something wrong. The splice looks neater and more techie. It has a micro amount less windage in a place that doesn't matter. Most important, it makes twenty bucks for the marine store every time someone asks for one. Then another twenty when they want to move the wear point or a whole new halyard if the don't. Good deal for them. If you ever have to go up the mast and snag a run away halyard with a boathook, you'll be glad of that knot. The splice taper would have jambed in the sheave while the weight of the knot and the clean stop will let it come back easily. I never heard of that knot but it's a great one and designed to be used on that probably flogged and flapped around more than any others. -- Roger Long |
#6
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In "Roger Long" writes:
If you knew exactly what was going on inside those splices, the know wouldn't look so unreliable. It's all just friction. If you are letting your halyards flog around enough that there is any risk of a knot like that getting loose, you are doing something wrong. The splice looks neater and more techie. It has a micro amount less windage in a place that doesn't matter. Most important, it makes twenty bucks for the marine store every time someone asks for one. Then another twenty when they want to move the wear point or a whole new halyard if the don't. Good deal for them. I do not understand why you must pay for the splice. There are lots of good books and web-pages where they teach you to make one. Of course it takes some practice, but after you learn it, you can use your skill for the rest of your life, or as longa as your fingers hold. If the deal is so good fot them, then you have a business after you learn how to do it. :-). If you ever have to go up the mast and snag a run away halyard with a boathook, you'll be glad of that knot. The splice taper would have jambed in the sheave while the weight of the knot and the clean stop will let it come back easily. I do not think so if you have rope sheaves and your sheave box is of the proper size. The splice (properly done) is tapered and you can use a small plastic "ball" above the shackle so that you do not pull it in the sheave box. A properly done splice is in no way inferior to a knot and a proper not will hold. The main difference is of course in the appearance and the splice is in the traditional sense more seamanlike. I never heard of that knot but it's a great one and designed to be used on that probably flogged and flapped around more than any others. So far the only real argument for the not against the splice is the price. You can get some free tuition in making splices at most big boatshows, as the makers of the ropes have demonstrations how the splices are made. - Lauri Tarkkonen |
#7
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Agreed. Brian Toss's video on splicing double braid is a great investment.
With a little practice you can put a very neat splice in even really hard stuff like T-900. -- Glenn Ashmore I'm building a 45' cutter in strip/composite. Watch my progress (or lack there of) at: http://www.rutuonline.com Shameless Commercial Division: http://www.spade-anchor-us.com |
#8
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Splicing these newer high tech ropes is not something I want to learn
for a critical application in the couple of days before the mast has to go up. -- Roger Long |
#9
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My new boat came with four nice fenders with whips spliced directly
on. The morning after the first night of the delivery home (on the Erie Canal) one was missing because the splice had slipped loose. On inspection, another was ready to go. Clearly the splicing task had been given to "the new guy" and nobody double checked. I replaced most of the splices on the boat with knots. The halyards had been tied with bowlines - they had been changed before I raised the sails the first time! If you must splice onto something like a fender, its better to first splice a eye, then pass the eye through the hole, and pass the bitter end through the eye. This will put more tension on the rope itself, and not on the splice. Roger Long wrote: If you knew exactly what was going on inside those splices, the know wouldn't look so unreliable. It's all just friction. If you are letting your halyards flog around enough that there is any risk of a knot like that getting loose, you are doing something wrong. The splice looks neater and more techie. It has a micro amount less windage in a place that doesn't matter. Most important, it makes twenty bucks for the marine store every time someone asks for one. Then another twenty when they want to move the wear point or a whole new halyard if the don't. Good deal for them. If you ever have to go up the mast and snag a run away halyard with a boathook, you'll be glad of that knot. The splice taper would have jambed in the sheave while the weight of the knot and the clean stop will let it come back easily. I never heard of that knot but it's a great one and designed to be used on that probably flogged and flapped around more than any others. |
#10
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Believe me, the stunsail tackbend is the "proper" knot for this
application, not the bowline. Try it out on something less critical. You'll see that once cinched down there is no way that it can come loose. Untying is a bit of a pain, but it can be done. BTW, the other name for the stunsail tackbend is the buntline hitch; you'll find more references under that name. The sailnet article in particular debunks the myth of the bowline as the ultimate knot. http://www.geocities.com/roo_two/buntlinehitch.html http://www.scoutingresources.org.uk/...sbuntline.html http://www.sailnet.com/collections/l...leID=rousma017 Denis Marier wrote: I have to replace my main and jib halyard. My old one have the shackles threaded to a nice spliced loop. It looks very nice. As for the new halyards, I am not skillful at splicing and I thinking of using a knot to install the shackles. At first I was thinking of using the bowline. After reading your reply I am considering the stunsail knot. I am apprehensive that if one day the knot gets loose and the halyard gets out of the mast it will be a tenuous job to run the halyard inside the mast. "Jeff" wrote in message ... Denis Marier wrote: This site is interesting. I have try the stunsail knot. I see some use for it on a dinghy sailboat. However I feel more comfortable with the bowline knot on larger boats. While not as nice as the stunsail the bowline is more secure. Maybe with time I'll get use to a stunsail knot and appreciate it more. You should definitely use the knots you're comfortable with. The most important thing about any knot is its predictability. This is why my wife's knot tying scares me - her bowlines seems to come out different every time! I would, however, disagree about the bowline being more secure. It a bit vulnerable to coming apart if severely flogged, especially if not well finished. Also, when used on a halyard, whether to a shackle or directly to the head, a small loop will be left - this can prevent the sail from be hoisted all the way. In addition, whenever a bowline is tied on a small object, like a shackle or headboard, it will suffer chafe because it is free to move around. A proper end hitch, like the stunsail tackbend or anchor bend is better for this type of attachment. I've used the stunsail tackbend as one of my primary knots for 40 years now, along with a bowline, tautline, and figure eight (and lots more - I was a knot geek before I learned to sail!) and I've never known one to fail, whether on small line or large. |
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