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terry wrote:
Our 1970s Westerly Tiger has stainless steel safety rails/wires on stanchions around the boat. At the attachment to the stern pulpit each steel wire is fastened by a now dodgy looking (probably rotting) rope tie. Wondering what is the reason for these ... To avoid having a metal 'loop' around the boat that 'might' affect radio direction finding, if used, on the now old fashioned lower frequencies, such as coastal beacons in the 'Long Wave' band or broadcasting stations in the 'Medium Wave' or 'Broadcast; band. The RDF explanation is the only one I've heard that appears even slightly plausible. Of course the RDF/ADF scheme is by now of little interest to US sailors and perhaps only marginally interesting to Europeans. There was for a time talk about being able to cut the lifelines to bring an overboard crew back on the boat. Cutting through lifeline bottle screws could take more time. -- Good luck and good sailing. s/v Kerry Deare of Barnegat http://home.comcast.net/~kerrydeare |
#2
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Armond Perretta wrote:
terry wrote: Our 1970s Westerly Tiger has stainless steel safety rails/wires on stanchions around the boat. At the attachment to the stern pulpit each steel wire is fastened by a now dodgy looking (probably rotting) rope tie. Wondering what is the reason for these ... To avoid having a metal 'loop' around the boat that 'might' affect radio direction finding, if used, on the now old fashioned lower frequencies, such as coastal beacons in the 'Long Wave' band or broadcasting stations in the 'Medium Wave' or 'Broadcast; band. The RDF explanation is the only one I've heard that appears even slightly plausible. Of course the RDF/ADF scheme is by now of little interest to US sailors and perhaps only marginally interesting to Europeans. There was for a time talk about being able to cut the lifelines to bring an overboard crew back on the boat. Cutting through lifeline bottle screws could take more time. Several years ago I rebuilt an ICS Nav4 Navtex aerial. (a passive vertical helix). When working properly and mounted clear of nearby metalwork we were getting weather reports from Split and Caligari while in Tunisian waters. With a shorted turn, range was reduced to basically line of sight. It would have been very unhappy with a shorted turn around the whole boat. NAVTEX is IMHO another reason to retain the traditional guardwire lashings. -- Ian Malcolm. London, ENGLAND. (NEWSGROUP REPLY PREFERRED) ianm[at]the[dash]malcolms[dot]freeserve[dot]co[dot]uk [at]=@, [dash]=- & [dot]=. *Warning* HTML & 32K emails -- NUL: 'Stingo' Albacore #1554 - 15' Early 60's, Uffa Fox designed, All varnished hot moulded wooden racing dinghy. |
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