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I've seen in come free, but only in light air with a very short end.
-- "j" ganz @@ www.sailnow.com "Jeff" wrote in message ... MMC wrote: I agree with advocates of the bowline for the following reasons: 1) it will not come untied until you want it to, Actually, the bowline is not perfect in this regard, especially if not well finished. I have heard of it coming free when used on jib sheets. I must confess, though, that I use them on my jib sheets because the stuns'l tackbends would get too bulky on the clew. 2) when you want it to- you can untie it, and 3) true it devalues the breaking strain of the line less than other knots. In this I mean that if a line is put under heavy strain, it will break at the knot before it reaches it's stated breaking point because of the bends required to form the knot will break first. Nope - this is a myth. Its not bad, but it isn't dramatically better than many other knots. And it can have a serious problem if used when a anchor bend should be used. I'm a firm believer that a boater only needs 3 knots; bowline, clove hitch, and square; along with a good idea of when to use each and the ability to do so quickly. The bowline is clearly a superior knot for many applications. However, the square knot and clove hitch I only use rarely and their holding power is so marginal I'd hesitate to teach them to a novice. Why not use teach useful knots, like a stuns'l tackbend (buntline hitch) or a tautline hitch or a sheetbend or a figure eight? These knots are used every day. Can you rig up a sailboat without knowing a stopper knots? |
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