Bolo
Contributing Partner
Someone once said that death and taxes are a sure thing in life and I suppose for sailboat owners eventually having to go up the mast is too. I need to go up mine to remove a broken TV antenna (half-way up) and reapir a deck light. The antenna is hanging by the cable and needs to come down before it falls down. (We think it was broken off it's mount by the spinnaker halyard.)
Need to get a bosun's chair and will be trusting my wife to trail off the main and spinnaker halyards while I go up. I know to use two halyards, one on the chair and another on a body harness. I was going to wear my PFD which has big "D" rings on the front. I'm also planning on tying myself off to the halyard using a good peice of rope and a bowline and not trusting the halyard shakels.
My main concern is, can I damage the halyards with my weight. I come in at 200 lbs (wet) and I'm assuming that a typical halyard on a 32-3 (in good working order) can handle much more working load than 200 lbs.
Any thoughts or tips to pass on? Thanks
Bolo
Need to get a bosun's chair and will be trusting my wife to trail off the main and spinnaker halyards while I go up. I know to use two halyards, one on the chair and another on a body harness. I was going to wear my PFD which has big "D" rings on the front. I'm also planning on tying myself off to the halyard using a good peice of rope and a bowline and not trusting the halyard shakels.
My main concern is, can I damage the halyards with my weight. I come in at 200 lbs (wet) and I'm assuming that a typical halyard on a 32-3 (in good working order) can handle much more working load than 200 lbs.
Any thoughts or tips to pass on? Thanks
Bolo