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Stephen R
 
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Default the sheets are middled

What does a nautical instruction mean that says "the sheets are middled"?

Thanks for your time.

Stephen R.


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paul cooke
 
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Default the sheets are middled

Stephen R wrote:

What does a nautical instruction mean that says "the sheets are middled"?

Thanks for your time.



your sheets are neither fully in or fully out but somewhere in the middle???

of course some context might give us some further clues...

--
COMPUTER POWER TO THE PEOPLE! DOWN WITH CYBERCRUD!
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Wild Bill
 
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Default the sheets are middled

Your bed is messy?

"Stephen R" no email @ no spam.com wrote in message
...
What does a nautical instruction mean that says "the sheets are middled"?

Thanks for your time.

Stephen R.




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Jeff Richards
 
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Default the sheets are middled

It seems to refer to the practice of cutting old, but still usable,
bedsheets down the centre and re-joining them at what had been the outer
edges, so moving the worn area to the edge and extending their life. I
guess it could refer to a similar practice with some running rigging which
tends to have uneven wear. See, for instance:
http://www.concordheritage.asn.au/chs-museum.htm
"... socks were darned and sheets "side-to-middled" rather than replaced."
However, it might just mean centred, or fastened at the cent
http://www.pbenyon.plus.com/B_S_M/Fo...uction_II.html
"To Reeve Brails. They are each in one piece of rope, and when the sail is
bent and hoisted, the position for the brails is determined on ; they are
middled, and the bight of each brail seized to the after-leech of the sails,
as marked, and rove through their respective blocks, from aft forward down
on deck."
Not that a brail is a sheet, of course.
http://www.charlescderokoinc.com/res.../wavertree.htm
"The jib and staysail sheets were secured to the clews of the sails with two
wire pendants connected to bullet blocks through which the sheets are rove.
It may be desirable to fashion the sheet pendants from one wire, middled and
seized to a thimble, and then shackled to the clew;"
--
Jeff Richards

"Stephen R" no email @ no spam.com wrote in message
...
What does a nautical instruction mean that says "the sheets are middled"?

Thanks for your time.

Stephen R.



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Mike P
 
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Default the sheets are middled

According to "Glossary of Nautical Terms from The New Practical Navigator."
circa 1814

"To middle a rope

To double it into equal parts"


"paul cooke" wrote in message
...
Stephen R wrote:

What does a nautical instruction mean that says "the sheets are

middled"?

Thanks for your time.



your sheets are neither fully in or fully out but somewhere in the

middle???

of course some context might give us some further clues...

--
COMPUTER POWER TO THE PEOPLE! DOWN WITH CYBERCRUD!





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Hollywood
 
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Default the sheets are middled

On Sun, 16 Nov 2003 21:02:19 GMT, paul cooke wrote:

Stephen R wrote:

What does a nautical instruction mean that says "the sheets are middled"?

Thanks for your time.



your sheets are neither fully in or fully out but somewhere in the middle???

of course some context might give us some further clues...


Doesn't it mean that you are not tying two separate sheets onto a sail?
  #7   Report Post  
Schoonertrash
 
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Default the sheets are middled

Not two separate sheets as in separate ropes or lines. The line is
continuous but doubled in half with each end leading somewhere. In this
case port and starboard if for example you are attaching it to a fore and
aft jib. The middle of the line (where it is bent) then attaches to the
sail. Think of it as thread doubled (or middled) through a sewing needle.


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Stephen R
 
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Default the sheets are middled

Thank you for your replies.

Stephen R.

"Jeff Richards" wrote in message
...
It seems to refer to the practice of cutting old, but still usable,
bedsheets down the centre and re-joining them at what had been the outer
edges, so moving the worn area to the edge and extending their life. I
guess it could refer to a similar practice with some running rigging which
tends to have uneven wear. See, for instance:
http://www.concordheritage.asn.au/chs-museum.htm
"... socks were darned and sheets "side-to-middled" rather than replaced."
However, it might just mean centred, or fastened at the cent
http://www.pbenyon.plus.com/B_S_M/Fo...uction_II.html
"To Reeve Brails. They are each in one piece of rope, and when the sail is
bent and hoisted, the position for the brails is determined on ; they are
middled, and the bight of each brail seized to the after-leech of the

sails,
as marked, and rove through their respective blocks, from aft forward down
on deck."
Not that a brail is a sheet, of course.
http://www.charlescderokoinc.com/res.../wavertree.htm
"The jib and staysail sheets were secured to the clews of the sails with

two
wire pendants connected to bullet blocks through which the sheets are

rove.
It may be desirable to fashion the sheet pendants from one wire, middled

and
seized to a thimble, and then shackled to the clew;"
--
Jeff Richards

"Stephen R" no email @ no spam.com wrote in message
...
What does a nautical instruction mean that says "the sheets are

middled"?

Thanks for your time.

Stephen R.





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