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Roger Long wrote:
What about this idea I'm leaning towards at this point? Put a generous sized eyesplice in each sheet and simply bring the bitter end back through the eye. This works until you want to end-for-end it. I wish I hadn't already bought one half of the sheet accidentally because just putting a bight in the middle through the cringle and bringing both bitter ends through it make the most sense to me this morning. I've done this on smaller boats; I'm not sure its appropriate for the high load of larger boats. It seems like this is something there should be a standard for in traditional boats. I'm surprised I never picked it up from my tarred hemp and baggywrinkle days. After all, there is a "Topsail Sheet Bend". That's almost exactly the same requirements as a headsail so, why isn't it a "Sail Bend" or isn't there a "Jib Sheet Bend". I asked over at the Wooden Boat Forum where people obsess about these things and didn't get an answer. You mean, like a "tackbend"? We've had this discussion before. I use bowlines, which I've never heard of failing on normal Dacron. However, they can snag on stays, and if this happens, I would go to the stunsail tackbend. I use this knot in numerous places, its probably the most common knot on my boat. One problem is that with large sheets you have a huge solid hunk of rope on the clew. http://www.wellesley.edu/Athletics/P...mainsheet.html Perhaps there is a need for some new high tech product, perhaps a Kevlar strap that can be spliced onto a sheet. Or is there some soft equivalent of a "bulldog" clamp for rope? |