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#1
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![]() "Himszy" LANDLUBBER wrote "Hans-Marc Olsen" wrote Real sailors will travel the seven seas without any technology, just a boat made of wood and sails! What about ropes? There are no "ropes" on vessels. Boats use LINE. |
#2
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I believe there can be two ropes on a boat, the rope bell, and any line that is
not being used? Am i right about that? |
#3
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![]() "Florida Keyz" wrote I believe there can be two ropes on a boat, the rope bell, and any line that is not being used? Am i right about that? OK maybe the pull on a bell clapper. ;-) All other is line (stowed, standing, or running). Jack |
#4
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![]() All other is line (stowed, standing, or running). Should exclude sheets, halyards, and stays even if they were nylon or hemp, as these are standing or running rigging. "Line" best used to describe rope used for mooring, anchoring, and any other securing of items anywhere on the boat. Including when the bell clapper is tied-off to prevent it's ringing in heavy seas! ;-) Cheers, Jack |
#5
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Jack Painter wrote:
There are no "ropes" on vessels. Boats use LINE. The Navy has lots of rope on their ships. Rope is stranded wire "cable" (for lack of a better word). This is the big serious stuff for towing and lifting and the like. Line is non-metallic and generally made from synthetic or organic fibers. Line that was smaller than 1/4" or so is generally called small stuff. But there are exceptions, like shot line. Jack -- Jack Erbes in Ellsworth, Maine, USA - jacker at midmaine dot com |
#6
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![]() "Jack Erbes" wrote Jack Painter wrote: There are no "ropes" on vessels. Boats use LINE. The Navy has lots of rope on their ships. Rope is stranded wire "cable" (for lack of a better word). This is the big serious stuff for towing and lifting and the like. Line is non-metallic and generally made from synthetic or organic fibers. Line that was smaller than 1/4" or so is generally called small stuff. But there are exceptions, like shot line. Jack Erbes in Ellsworth, Maine, USA - jacker at midmaine dot com Jack Erbes, you should know better! That's what you get for calling yourself Navy when you were a spook, lol. Admirable work but a sailor it was not. Cable is not the lack of a better word. Cable IS wire rope, and HAWSER is another word used nautically. But rope is NOT. A tow LINE, mooring LINES, towing HAWSER. Flaked lines, flemmed lines, line locker. No rope. Jack Painter A Sailor in Virginia |
#7
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![]() after the third week of a stormy tasman sea voyage the ropes were the only things talking to me, ....they looked pretty good too, but didnt have names like you are suggesting... bruce A tow LINE, mooring LINES, towing HAWSER. Flaked lines, flemmed lines, line locker. No rope. Jack Painter A Sailor in Virginia |
#8
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Who realy give a damn except those who are trying to teach?
Those Who can't? etc. etc. |
#9
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Jack Painter wrote:
snip Jack Erbes, you should know better! That's what you get for calling yourself Navy when you were a spook, lol. Admirable work but a sailor it was not. Cable is not the lack of a better word. Cable IS wire rope, and HAWSER is another word used nautically. But rope is NOT. A tow LINE, mooring LINES, towing HAWSER. Flaked lines, flemmed lines, line locker. No rope. Hmmm... You bubbleheads always think you know everything. :) My knowledge on the subject goes back to NTC San Diego, 1964, Company 386. Standing at a chest-high pipe stanchion located abaft the beam of the USS Recruit was a classroom for recruits. It was there that I absorbed the basics of marlinspike seamanship from a somewhat weathered, but entertaining, Chief Boatswain's Mate. I clearly remember the Chief saying that we had to know and remember that wire was called rope and that the stuff that $#@ing civilians and Marines called rope was called line. I mentally cataloged that and, sure enough, it got me a correct answer on the written exam we took a few days later. So I learned two things. One was that wire was rope and the second was that the Chief is never wrong. So at your prodding I decided that my knowledge could be affirmed by the NAVEDTRA MILITARY REQUIREMENTS, BASIC (BMR) training manual. I quickly found that online and went to Chapter 7 (Basic Seamanship): http://www.globalsecurity.org/milita.../12018_ch7.pdf On page 7-12 under the topic of marlinspike Seamanship I found the following elucidating statements: "Rope is a general term and can include both fiber and wire rope. In the Navy, Sailors generally refer to fiber rope as line, and wire rope is referred to as rope, wire rope, or wire." So even though I was clearly right once, by current standards nobody is wrong. And I also know how that came to be. Numerous revisions have occurred since the Navy became an All Volunteer Force (which it already had been except in time of war). Since 1975 or so it has busily engaged itself in making itself a more pleasant and less challenging place to be. Wondering what the date on the online manual was, I went back to the Introduction and found it dates to 1999. http://www.globalsecurity.org/milita...c/12018_fm.pdf And I also found this scalding reminder of the differences between the Navy I joined in 1964 and the I retired from in 1990: "Although the words "he," "him," and "his" are used sparingly in this manual to enhance communication, they are not intended to be gender driven nor to affront or discriminate against anyone reading this text." I'm sure that eventually the manual will also include a statement that: "An inability on the part of the anyone reading this text to correctly recall specific details of information and terminology in subsequent testing is not to be taken as an inference of mental or physical inferiority. If the reader is traumatized by not being able to meet required standards for evaluation of intelligence and ability, a waiver of the standards can be obtained from the Command Career Counselor." Oh yeah, one other small correction, the correct term is "flemished", not flemmed. I got pretty good on marlinspike seamanship at boot camp, I got really good at it when I owned a Columbia 22 for two years in Hawaii. I was a sailor! Cheers, Jack (A former sailor currently aground without a boat.) -- Jack Erbes in Ellsworth, Maine, USA - jacker at midmaine dot com |
#10
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![]() "Jack Erbes" wrote Hmmm... You bubbleheads always think you know everything. :) we are good, roger that! I'm sure that eventually the manual will also include a statement that: "An inability on the part of the anyone reading this text to correctly recall specific details of information and terminology in subsequent testing is not to be taken as an inference of mental or physical inferiority. If the reader is traumatized by not being able to meet required standards for evaluation of intelligence and ability, a waiver of the standards can be obtained from the Command Career Counselor." God help us then. At least they did away with the "time out" cards in boot camp, so I heard. Oh yeah, one other small correction, the correct term is "flemished", not flemmed. I know, thank you. "flemmed" was used in slang only, just like the command "flem", which rarely escapes a Chief's lips in proper vernacular ;-) I forgot to include Rat Lines and Lead Line in my examples, there are probably others. We used to call steel cable "wire rope" in the Ironworkers also, but I don't recall ever hearing that in the Navy. Must have been the sheltered life aboard a Boomer ;-) Cheers, Jack Sailing with the Coast Guard now |
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