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Mooring whips
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Mooring whips
On Apr 1, 9:40 am, "Ernest Scribbler"
wrote: Anyone have any experience withhttp://www.mooringwhipsales.com? Mooring whips work best when their bent, not straight out. Now if you've got tides to deal with, and the whips are mounted on your bulkhead, the whips do very little, or nothing, at high tide, and are worthless during a storm surge. If you mount them to a float they should be OK for a light boat, but then you may have a problem with sticking out too far. Myself, I think their worthless, I would never use them. I've seen many a boat on whips get beaten up in bad weather. On my cannal their popular, with people new to boating, most of the guy's that have had them before got rid of them long ago. And then their's the problem of getting off and on the boat. John |
Mooring whips
Capt John wrote:
On Apr 1, 9:40 am, "Ernest Scribbler" wrote: Anyone have any experience withhttp://www.mooringwhipsales.com? Mooring whips work best when their bent, not straight out. Now if you've got tides to deal with, and the whips are mounted on your bulkhead, the whips do very little, or nothing, at high tide, and are worthless during a storm surge. If you mount them to a float they should be OK for a light boat, but then you may have a problem with sticking out too far. Myself, I think their worthless, I would never use them. I've seen many a boat on whips get beaten up in bad weather. On my cannal their popular, with people new to boating, most of the guy's that have had them before got rid of them long ago. And then their's the problem of getting off and on the boat. What problem is that? I usually see the whips just plain used wrong. You still need 4 lines - bow, stern, & 2 spring lines, in addition to the whip lines, & properly placed fenders. The whips are great when used properly. With all of the lines in place, there is no problem boarding or going ashore. Rob John |
Mooring whips
On Apr 2, 12:57 pm, trainfan1 wrote:
Capt John wrote: On Apr 1, 9:40 am, "Ernest Scribbler" wrote: Anyone have any experience withhttp://www.mooringwhipsales.com? Mooring whips work best when their bent, not straight out. Now if you've got tides to deal with, and the whips are mounted on your bulkhead, the whips do very little, or nothing, at high tide, and are worthless during a storm surge. If you mount them to a float they should be OK for a light boat, but then you may have a problem with sticking out too far. Myself, I think their worthless, I would never use them. I've seen many a boat on whips get beaten up in bad weather. On my cannal their popular, with people new to boating, most of the guy's that have had them before got rid of them long ago. And then their's the problem of getting off and on the boat. What problem is that? I usually see the whips just plain used wrong. You still need 4 lines - bow, stern, & 2 spring lines, in addition to the whip lines, & properly placed fenders. The whips are great when used properly. With all of the lines in place, there is no problem boarding or going ashore. Rob John- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text -- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - I've used the same set of whips for over 10 years now, no problem. As Rob said, you still need the regular lines plus the whip lines, but, at least with my boat, we have to leave one of the lines untied from the whip until everyone is off. Then we tie off the final line to the forward whip. You can get on and off with the whips connected but it's easier with one untied so you can hold the boat right alongside the dock and not drop anything or anyone in the drink. Also, it is true that from a fixed dock or bulkhead they are useless during high water in storms, unless you're actually out there to frequently adjust the lines to compensate for changing water levels. |
Mooring whips
On Apr 1, 6:40?am, "Ernest Scribbler"
wrote: Anyone have any experience withhttp://www.mooringwhipsales.com? If you lease your dock space and use mooring whips, make sure that you keep your monthly payments current. Failing to do so could result in the marina operator securing your vessel to the dock, and that just might attract that questionable element that is fascinated with whips and chains. :-) |
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