ben2go
Guru
I've been researching boats and of course, terminology and pics have me confused, again. So let us go back to the basics before my head implodes from misinformation.
The line that runs between the forward (port and starboard) cleats, that attaches to the anchor chain, to take the load off the windlass. I know this as a snubber or snub line. Correct? Yes? No? Maybe? Shake the magic 8-ball?
The "snubber" where should it lay, or is there a preferred length? I ask this because I see pics where the subber is up close to the bow off the water and some where the snubber is well under water where it attaches to the chain. Most of these are not being pulled tight. Simply just hanging there like a willow in the wind.
A snub line is something I understand the reason for, to take strain off the windlass. Suspenders for the anchor line matey. In practice, I am unsure how it should be properly utilized. Would you please elaborate on your setups, past, present, and future?
Shall we rode? I have always known "the rode" to be the line that is attached to the anchor, the anchor rode. Is there another line on a boat that could be so affectionately named "The Rode"?
Onto the bridal. I know this to be the same as a subber, but used in the rear to tow a dink in the drink. I'm a poet and din't know it. Anyway, some use a block to allow the dink, and it's line, full swing. While others seem to connect the dink line to the bridal by way of a center loop tied in the bridal. I'm not sure of the terminology here or the proper use.
Thank you all for your patience and perseverance as we depart this runway out of my mind.
The line that runs between the forward (port and starboard) cleats, that attaches to the anchor chain, to take the load off the windlass. I know this as a snubber or snub line. Correct? Yes? No? Maybe? Shake the magic 8-ball?
The "snubber" where should it lay, or is there a preferred length? I ask this because I see pics where the subber is up close to the bow off the water and some where the snubber is well under water where it attaches to the chain. Most of these are not being pulled tight. Simply just hanging there like a willow in the wind.
A snub line is something I understand the reason for, to take strain off the windlass. Suspenders for the anchor line matey. In practice, I am unsure how it should be properly utilized. Would you please elaborate on your setups, past, present, and future?
Shall we rode? I have always known "the rode" to be the line that is attached to the anchor, the anchor rode. Is there another line on a boat that could be so affectionately named "The Rode"?
Onto the bridal. I know this to be the same as a subber, but used in the rear to tow a dink in the drink. I'm a poet and din't know it. Anyway, some use a block to allow the dink, and it's line, full swing. While others seem to connect the dink line to the bridal by way of a center loop tied in the bridal. I'm not sure of the terminology here or the proper use.
Thank you all for your patience and perseverance as we depart this runway out of my mind.