There's no Bowline involved in this hitch Keith. I've never had the "Rolling Hitch" slide on anything that I tied it to.Joe, i can't quite make out how the hitch is used to secure the furler to the gin pole.
1 Is the gin pole secured to the bowline?
2. Does the hitch slide on the furler while the mast is being lowered?
I tried to zoom in on the pic of the furler and gin pole but couldn't.
thanks for your help
keith
What I did was take 1/4" X 5' braid line and tied the rolling hitch to the Vinyl furler luff about a foot or two above the Gin pole.
Then I rapped the line around the Gin Pole twice (a round turn) and pulled it tight and added two half hitches to the rope above the round turn. Then I brought the rope around the luff and tied two half hitches around the Gin Pole to entrap the furler luff to the Gin Pole. In the picture I'm using a broom handle for the furler luff and a Whisker Pole that one of my friends just gave me a couple of months ago in place of the Gin Pole. The idea behind all this is to be able to let your mast down without having someone hold the furler in line with the mast.
Half Hitches are very simple to tie but whenever there is any strain involved, the half hitches can bind on the object that you're tying to. So it's always advisable to make a "Round Turn" first, then tie your half hitches over it. That way, you can always untie your half hitches. But then on the other hand, "four thumbs and a finger"--
This rolling hitch can be used on any rope and the Bowline isn't part of the hitch unless you wanted to fasten a block and tackle to it and use it to relieve the strain on a Gennie sheet that is jammed on your winch.
Attachments
-
36.2 KB Views: 258
-
32 KB Views: 232
-
26 KB Views: 240
-
34.2 KB Views: 239
-
34.4 KB Views: 252