There was a boat here (Erie) made in Germany for a Rear Admiral who ran
shipyards and was about as anal as they come. Nice guy, tho.

He supervised the building of this boat, about 47 foot, double ended
Aluminum. It had a large SS grab that ran all the way around the cabintop,
the attachment points pointed in and down and allowed a car or two to roll
freely the entire way around, an attachment point for his tether. He had a
ton of ingenious things on that boat.

 

Bill Coleman

C&C 39 animated_favicon1

 

From: CnC-List [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of David
Knecht
Sent: Friday, January 03, 2014 3:43 PM
To: CnC CnC discussion list
Subject: Re: Stus-List Tethers

 

This reminds me of a comment in Practical Sailor recently about tethers and
jacklines.  The writer was a climber as well as sailor and was making the
point that deck level jacklines were a bad idea for a variety of reasons.
He argued the jackline/tether should be at chest height.  I have not used
jacklines yet (just got a set), but I also presume that if fixed at bow and
cockpit, they will tend to bow outward significantly if stressed near the
mast.  So putting this thought together with dwight's idea for padeyes on
the mast for the Cunningham, I am wondering if it would make more sense to
run the jackline through that padeye and knot it then continue with the free
end to the cockpit.  That creates two shorter jacklines at waist to chest
height, which should bow much less, not get underfoot and tend to keep you
upright rather than pulling down on you.  You would have to unhook and
rehook to go to the bow, but most times I would be going forward it would be
to the mast, not the bow.  Thoughts?  Dave

 

On Jan 3, 2014, at 1:00 PM, Ken Rodmell <[email protected]> wrote:





Don't go overboard

The latest advice on the list re tethers may save my life in the future.
I've unwisely seldom worn a harness with tether while single handing and
I'll bet many other listers have not either, especially in benign
conditions.

This year, I won't go out without!  I'm also going to try to convince some
of my pals to do all they can to stay on the boat. 

Thanks for the great advice, Atoine's in particular was especially graphic
and convincing.

Ken Rodmell
Lotus C&C 35 Mk II 
Toronto

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David Knecht

Aries

1990 C&C 34+

New London, CT




 

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