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On Jun 13, 11:39*pm, I_am_Tosk
wrote: In article , says... On Mon, 13 Jun 2011 19:56:00 -0500, Richard Casady wrote: On Mon, 13 Jun 2011 13:18:09 -0400, Marc Auslander wrote: I suspect you're not going to sea, but doing coastal cruising. *I've towed my hard dink through pretty wild coastal weather - and never got into trouble. *A long painter prevents it from riding up your stern. Long painters are a mistake if you have a motor. In that case the painter should stop short of the propeller. You can use a long tow line with it. In big seas a long tow line is absolutely necessary. *Frankly I don't understand your distinction between a tow line and a painter unless you are referring to the painter as the line used for everyday tie up, as opposed to long distance towing. *Best solution for a painter is floating line like polypro (miserable as it is for other reasons), or to install some small floats at regular intervals. *All this of course is to prevent the painter from getting sucked into the props accidently. Well, for protected water I always made the painter about a foot too short to hit the prop... If I needed more length, I would bend on another line. -- Team Rowdy Mouse, Banned from the Mall for life!- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Duh! That's the norm to keep a boat's own painter out of it's 'OWN' propellor. When towing you'd have to have the dinghy right up againt the mother boat's stern to avoid that problem and then you create others... such as the dinghy ramming the mother boat. |
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