Hi All...I've got a challenge I'm hoping you can help me with.
I recently moved to a new slip where I am required to cross the stern lines. During a recent (and significant) storm, my C30 MKII chewed through both 5/8" lines affixed to the starboard stern cleat. By (poor?) design, there is a stainless steel vent just behind each of the stern cleats. When crossing the stern lines, each line has no choice but to wrap around these vents before reaching the cleats. These vents have sharp edges, resulting in extreme chafe to any line under load. For perspective, the 1" emergency line that was attached after she broke free was already half chafed through when I arrived the next morning.
At my previous slip, there was no need to cross the stern lines because the aft pilings were much closer to the stern of the boat, so I could just tie the starboard line to the starboard cleat, and port line to port cleat while still maintaining a good line-to-cleat angle to prevent sway. But because of how far back the aft pilings are in my current slip, the same arrangement can't be safely recreated.
I've spent a few days researching alternative solutions and am coming up empty handed. I had considered crossing the stern lines to my primary winches, but given the angle, it would mean using my stern rail as a chock, resulting in certain death of my stern railing under typical summer storm load. I had considered chafe guards, but because the distance between the vents and cleats is only a couple inches, it doesn't seem feasible (or even useful given the amount of chafe). Crossing to my midships cleats is a no go because of both angle and load requirements (they are small and attached to my jib sheet track). I had even considered moving the boat back far enough where I could use the starboard/starboard port/port configuration I used to, but because of how far back the aft pilings are, I wouldn't be able to get on or off the boat.
My goal is to find a good solution that is both safe, and highly repeatable (I sail at least twice a week). I can't imagine I'm the first person to come across this problem, so I'm hoping you folks might have a good solution.
Thanks!
Finn
I recently moved to a new slip where I am required to cross the stern lines. During a recent (and significant) storm, my C30 MKII chewed through both 5/8" lines affixed to the starboard stern cleat. By (poor?) design, there is a stainless steel vent just behind each of the stern cleats. When crossing the stern lines, each line has no choice but to wrap around these vents before reaching the cleats. These vents have sharp edges, resulting in extreme chafe to any line under load. For perspective, the 1" emergency line that was attached after she broke free was already half chafed through when I arrived the next morning.
At my previous slip, there was no need to cross the stern lines because the aft pilings were much closer to the stern of the boat, so I could just tie the starboard line to the starboard cleat, and port line to port cleat while still maintaining a good line-to-cleat angle to prevent sway. But because of how far back the aft pilings are in my current slip, the same arrangement can't be safely recreated.
I've spent a few days researching alternative solutions and am coming up empty handed. I had considered crossing the stern lines to my primary winches, but given the angle, it would mean using my stern rail as a chock, resulting in certain death of my stern railing under typical summer storm load. I had considered chafe guards, but because the distance between the vents and cleats is only a couple inches, it doesn't seem feasible (or even useful given the amount of chafe). Crossing to my midships cleats is a no go because of both angle and load requirements (they are small and attached to my jib sheet track). I had even considered moving the boat back far enough where I could use the starboard/starboard port/port configuration I used to, but because of how far back the aft pilings are, I wouldn't be able to get on or off the boat.
My goal is to find a good solution that is both safe, and highly repeatable (I sail at least twice a week). I can't imagine I'm the first person to come across this problem, so I'm hoping you folks might have a good solution.
Thanks!
Finn