Page 45 - The Complete Rigger’s Apprentice
P. 45

chafe-resistant, and doesn’t stiffen or shrink when   For cruising or racing, you might subdivide the
                  the weather turns wet.                       halyard category, dedicating the most extreme rope
                      “Spun” three-strand Dacron, in which the yarns  to the most extreme loads. So there’d be a little less
                  are spun from a series of short fibers, is relatively  size and a little more stretch in the drifter halyard
                  weak, but is sometimes a preferred construction  than in the jib halyard, for instance.
                  because of its comfortable feel. “Filament” Dacron,   But then you might match your ideal require-
                  with the yarns made up of continuous fibers or    ments with the rope that meets your specs, look
                  filaments, is slicker but significantly stronger and  at the price per foot, and decide to take up pow-
                  less elastic.                                erboating. If that’s the case, it’s time to go back
                      One other running-rigging choice, especially  over your ideals and see if you can get what you
                  appropriate for traditional craft, is ultraviolet-sta-  want, or something like it, for less. And you prob-
                  bilized split-fiber polypropylene—a multisyllabic  ably can; ropemakers know that some of their
                  way of saying that it won’t break down in sunlight  high-tech stuff is absurdly high-priced, so they
                  or chafe to pieces as fast as ordinary polypropyl-  do what they can to get comparable performance

                  ene does. Roblon and Navy Flex are two of the  out of lower-tech. The best example of this is New
                  better-known brands of this kind of rope.  You still  England Rope’s VPC, (see below), a product with
                  need to be very conscious of chafe with the stuff,  a blended HM core that stretches half as much as
                  using large blocks and making sure all leads are fair,  double-braid Dacron, and costs half as much as
                  but it is inexpensive, has a delightful feel to it, holds  rope with an all-HM core.
                  its lay, is easily spliced, and even floats. That’s a blitz   You can also save a lot by playing with size.
                  of things to choose from, but the process need not  Nine-sixteenths-inch might look right, but if
                  be confusing. Again, evaluate your craft and sailing  you look at the actual loads you might find that
                  style, then choose accordingly.              3 ⁄8 -inch is way plenty strong, and still feels fine in
                      For example, think of the variables involved  your hands. Pay attention to diameter even if you
                  in choosing rope to control the sails. There are so  do have money to burn; extra diameter means extra
                  many different jobs to be done, each with its own  weight and windage.
                  variables of magnitude, handling, and compatibility   One more useful useful distinction: with most
                  with things like cleats, winches, and stoppers. You  running rigging at the deck, the loads are usually
                  could practically have a different rope for every line  highest when the runs are shortest, whereas with
                  aboard. That would be silly, of course. But consider-  most running rigging aloft, the loads are usually
                  ing the spectrum of running rigging requirements, it  hightest when the runs are longest. So with the
                  is equally silly to have just one type of rope aboard,  mainsheet, for example, you don’t get high loads
                  and you see that a lot.                      until the boom is strapped in tight and you are going
                      As a compromise between specialization and  to weather, while the halyard for the mains’l, in the
                  simplicity, it’s sensible to divide the rig into general  same circumstance, has to run all the way up the
                  requirements, and install rope to suit (see chart,  mast, and partway back down, to get to the head
                  page 25). For example, halyards would be one cat-  of the sail. Because elasticity is a function of length,
                  egory. In that category you’d first scale for load,  the sheet won’t stretch much no matter how high
                  using catalog recommendations or sail area/boat  the load, but that halyard will. So it makes sense to
                  speed formulas. Then you might ask yourself how  invest in low-stretch material for the halyard, but
                  much performance matters to you. If you planned to  the same material would be wasted on the sheet.
                  race, you’d start shopping for a rope of the needed   In addition, you handle the sheet all the time,
                  strength that was maximally inelastic. If you were  while the halyard is infrequently adjusted. So stiff-
                  planning to cruise, you might wander off in search  ness is not a big issue in a halyard rope, while sup-
                  of any old rope because “it’s only for cruising,” but  pleness and a good grip are very important for a
                  don’t—mediocre rigging will cripple your boat.  sheet. So ergonomic needs are well-served, too.
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