![]() |
Anti chafe protection
With hurri%$#& season upon us, I thought someone might find this link
useful. http://www.hsarmor.com/htm/chafeprice.htm http://www.hsarmor.com/images/fkpindex.jpg Purchased some product from them, and was satisfied with the service and the quality of the product. I will definitely rest a little easier during a storm. Just hope the guy upwind doesn't have his "insurance" anchor/rode out. I have no financial stake in this company at all. Mike. |
Anti chafe protection
Well, to be fair,
These don't keep water out, they just sheath the line. In "bad conditions" (tropical storm/hurricanes), horizontal, wind driven rain will find it's way into every crevice, unless it is purposely and perfectly sealed. This chafe protection doesn't prevent the line from being soaked during these kinds of conditions. You are right though in your statement that the nylon line will do much better if wet. Mike. Charlie Morgan wrote: On 29 Jul 2006 05:46:48 -0700, "beaufortnc" wrote: With hurri%$#& season upon us, I thought someone might find this link useful. http://www.hsarmor.com/htm/chafeprice.htm http://www.hsarmor.com/images/fkpindex.jpg Purchased some product from them, and was satisfied with the service and the quality of the product. I will definitely rest a little easier during a storm. Just hope the guy upwind doesn't have his "insurance" anchor/rode out. I have no financial stake in this company at all. Mike. Although it would probably be good for natural fiber lines, I think it might actually contribute to failure of nylon lines in bad conditions. Nylon lines depend on water for lubrication as they stretch and contract. If you cover them with something that keeps water out, the individual nylon fibers work against each other and the friction gets them hot enough to melt and break. That's why lengths of old garden hose are also a bad idea. Nylon requires water. For everyday chafe protection in mild conditions this wouldn't be as much of a problem. When things get rough, however, it's a very different story. CWM |
Anti chafe protection
Charlie Morgan wrote:
On 29 Jul 2006 05:46:48 -0700, "beaufortnc" wrote: Although it would probably be good for natural fiber lines, I think it might actually contribute to failure of nylon lines in bad conditions. Nylon lines depend on water for lubrication as they stretch and contract. If you cover them with something that keeps water out, the individual nylon fibers work against each other and the friction gets them hot enough to melt and break. That's why lengths of old garden hose are also a bad idea. Nylon requires water. For everyday chafe protection in mild conditions this wouldn't be as much of a problem. When things get rough, however, it's a very different story. Have you ever personally seen a nylon line used for berthing or mooring actually get hot enough by this mechanism to melt or break? -paul |
Anti chafe protection
Well, the OP was referring to a storm anchor, so I would think it to be
relevannt. For out-of-the -ordinary circumstances, I would accept lab results. "Paul Cassel" wrote in message . .. Charlie Morgan wrote: On 29 Jul 2006 05:46:48 -0700, "beaufortnc" wrote: Although it would probably be good for natural fiber lines, I think it might actually contribute to failure of nylon lines in bad conditions. Nylon lines depend on water for lubrication as they stretch and contract. If you cover them with something that keeps water out, the individual nylon fibers work against each other and the friction gets them hot enough to melt and break. That's why lengths of old garden hose are also a bad idea. Nylon requires water. For everyday chafe protection in mild conditions this wouldn't be as much of a problem. When things get rough, however, it's a very different story. Have you ever personally seen a nylon line used for berthing or mooring actually get hot enough by this mechanism to melt or break? -paul |
Anti chafe protection
"Charlie Morgan" wrote in message ... Although it would probably be good for natural fiber lines, I think it might actually contribute to failure of nylon lines in bad conditions. Nylon lines depend on water for lubrication as they stretch and contract. If you cover them with something that keeps water out, the individual nylon fibers work against each other and the friction gets them hot enough to melt and break. That's why lengths of old garden hose are also a bad idea. Nylon requires water. For everyday chafe protection in mild conditions this wouldn't be as much of a problem. When things get rough, however, it's a very different story. OK, friction creates heat, lubrication reduces friction. I've noted that wetting the line where it passes through the fairlead stops it squeaking. However, internal friction within a line is trivial compared to the external friction created by chafe, which is highly localised. A hardened area where a nylon line passes through a fairlead is common. A low friction sleeve, or a thick sleeve which has elasticity, will prevent this occurring. My favourites are irrigation hose (PTFE, low friction, good for faileads) or thick soft plastic hose (high friction, but loads of elasticity, good for eyes around bollards). Both these have to be threaded onto the line before use. The advertised product can be added later - seems to be a good idea. My testing ground is Kalamata marina, which suffers a couple of times each winter from heavy surge for a day or three. One session of about 20 hours, heavy rain, took one of the pair of bow lines (nylon) beyond its stretch recovery point (all the long term berth yachts had a further pair of back up lines . . .). Neither line melted or broke. Mine didn't chafe through - though some (without protection) did. My damage points (apart from the lengthened rope!) were the bowline knot nips (which made the loops which went around the bollards). They were hardened. I now use eye splices. I think a lengthened rope (20mm diameter for a 12m yacht) is a good indicator that stresses were high, and 20 hours is a long time to withstand a 5 second cycle of stresses. I'd define that as rough. So from this experience I find it difficult to believe that anti chafe sleeves may contribute to line damage. -- JimB http://www.jimbaerselman.f2s.com/ Describing some Greek and Spanish cruising areas |
Anti chafe protection
Have you ever personally seen a nylon line used for berthing or mooring
actually get hot enough by this mechanism to melt or break? http://www.boatus.com/Hurricanes/line.asp |
Anti chafe protection
OK, friction creates heat, lubrication reduces friction. I've
noted that wetting the line where it passes through the fairlead stops it squeaking. Water carries away the heat, while also helping to reduce the friction. |
Anti chafe protection
Have you ever personally seen a nylon line used for berthing or mooring
actually get hot enough by this mechanism to melt or break? Bill Kearney wrote: http://www.boatus.com/Hurricanes/line.asp That's just what I was going to say. I have not seen lines that broke due to this, but I have replaced lines that seemed to have little needle-like hardened strands in them. That Boat US article was a very good explanation and seemed very plausible to me (after having seen partly melted strands in rope). Fresh Breezes- Doug King |
Anti chafe protection
|
All times are GMT +1. The time now is 08:04 AM. |
Powered by vBulletin® Copyright ©2000 - 2025, Jelsoft Enterprises Ltd.
Copyright ©2004 - 2014 BoatBanter.com