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On Jan 17, 11:44*am, Happy John wrote:
On Tue, 17 Jan 2012 10:11:41 -0500, JustWait wrote: On 1/17/2012 8:46 AM, Happy John wrote: On Mon, 16 Jan 2012 22:04:35 -0500, *wrote: On 1/16/2012 3:53 PM, wrote: On Mon, 16 Jan 2012 11:42:39 -0500, Wayne.B * wrote: On Mon, 16 Jan 2012 07:45:01 -0800 (PST), North Star * wrote: On Jan 16, 10:42 am, Happy * wrote: On Sun, 15 Jan 2012 19:59:28 -0800 (PST), * wrote: http://www.stardem.com/business/arti...e36-aa8f-9d293... Looks l really simple too. I wonder how it will handle rough wear 'n tear? Looks like a pretty good idea! If it stands up to the rigors of a life in the sal****er of the oceans..... it might work out. === Yes, and that's a very big "if". * Moorings are exposed to the elements 24/7 and subject to very high shock loads during storms. We've been seeing more of a better system in recent years where the mooring buoy has a bowl shaped appendage on the top where you can coil the mooring lines as you drop them. * That keeps the lines out of the water without introducing any complexity, moving parts or weak links. I have never used a mooring buoy but I assumed they just had an eye on top and you brought over your own line. Why is there a line there at all? So you can use a stick to pick it up out of the water and bring it up to your bow. Not everybodys bow is a foot and a half above the water like yours How would you expect somebody 8 feet off the water to hook tothe top of a bouy? Nine-foot pole? Yes, but I would rather reach for a rope with the pole, than a hook on a bouy. Well, you couldn't have a bunch of lines floating around all the buoys, or there'd be a lot of lines fouled in props. The link is to the map of Annapolis. If you zoom in directly south of the traffic circle at the Naval Academy, you can actually pick out the lines of buoys, some with boats attached. As they all float around with the tides and winds, the lines would just add another element of danger to the mess. http://tinyurl.com/7wkykgk- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - Here thay use polyproplene rope for the buoy mooring line because it floats. We never had a problen entering a buoy field, in fact thats how we kept the Mirage 33 at our 'summer club', down the coast in St Margaret's Bay. To be fair, we had one person stationed on the bow giving directions to the helmsman. but when I kept my Siren 17 at the local military sailing club, I did it all on my own. My biggest problem was the ancient British Seagull 40 Plus outboard that didn't have neutral or reverse and a tiller on a small boat that didn't stay on course when you let if go. You had to be quick. |
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