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#1
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Ok, how's about a bridal from the bow to the stern with a riding block
that will allow you to adjust the angle from bow to stern. Use two 50% para drouges in series, spaced on a 10X's your boat length line with a mid line sinker and chain sinker leader..?? So you toss it,off the bow, ride out a storm off the bow quarter, pop a head sail as the storm dies, and use it as a drouge off the stern or any angle to the stern. Or you toss it off the stern to run from or out of a storm, decide it's going to get real bad, and walk it to the bow to hunker down and ride it out. Joe |
#2
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On Oct 24, 4:19 pm, Joe wrote:
Ok, how's about a bridal from the bow to the stern with a riding block that will allow you to adjust the angle from bow to stern. Use two 50% para drouges in series, spaced on a 10X's your boat length line with a mid line sinker and chain sinker leader..?? I'll take wedding night like that. It is almost worth marrying to get the bride from the bow to the stern. I thought this was a family site. |
#3
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On Oct 24, 10:19 am, Joe wrote:
Ok, how's about a bridal from the bow to the stern with a riding block that will allow you to adjust the angle from bow to stern. Use two 50% para drouges in series, spaced on a 10X's your boat length line with a mid line sinker and chain sinker leader..?? I guess I'm missing the finer points of this setup. It seems to me that the bridle would have to be relatively short and tight in order for it to take the load off the trimming lines. That's going to put a lot of extra stress on the attachment points. Even so, when the anchor is near the bow or the stern one trimming line will need to take the full force of the anchor. So, the trim lines will have to go through blocks that can take the whole load and will need to go to winches that can take the whole load and the lines themselves will need to be sized to take the whole load. I don't see what we've gained by adding the bridle and block... I can, however, imagine a couple of nasty failure modes that have been added. In the event that the trimming lines run free the boat will broach back and forth beam to to the seas. If the boat broaches through the wind the bridle could sweep the deck. If the downwind bridle line gives way it might fly across the the deck with deadly force. The anchor will tend to put twist on its rode and if the bridle goes slack it could cause the block to foul the bridle. There as some other issues including the compromises you will need to make on drogue size. But mostly, the mind boggles at the idea of end for ending the boat in survival conditions. Still, if you really must then what's the advantage of the line and block? Couldn't you do the same thing with a traditional bridle (your trim lines) with the advantage that you could make them long enough so that they wouldn't crush you deck? -- Tom. -- Tom. |
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