Rope

January 16, 2025

In boating, rope is a length of braided or laid fibre used as running or standing gear until it is assigned a specific job, when it is usually called a line, sheet, halyard, painter, mooring warp or rode. Marine rope is chosen for strength, stretch, grip, chafe resistance and resistance to UV, salt water and repeated loading.

The right rope improves handling and safety: elastic nylon suits dock lines and snubbers, low-stretch polyester is common for sail controls, and floating polypropylene is useful for tenders but weak in UV. Correct sizing, fair leads and secure attachment to a Cleat, Shackles or Anchor Rode reduce shock loads, chafe and failure when anchoring, berthing, reefing or towing.

Before a passage, inspect ropes for glazing, stiffness, broken fibres and worn splices, then stow them dry and ready to run. PredictWind forecasts help anticipate stronger wind, sea state and Wind Gust conditions that increase loads on mooring, anchoring and sail-handling systems.

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