I was awake late last night and so I turned on netflix (on demand) and watched some of 'Annapolis book of seamanship - part 3'
Of course this stuff bores my wife to tears, but she was asleep
![Smile :)](./images/smilies/icon_smile.gif)
They were talking about cotter pin length and about the angle at which the split should be set when the pins are installed in the turnbuckles (before taping).
He (the host/instructor) said that the pin should be 1 1/3 times the length of the shaft that it's going through and that the angle of the split (when you split them on the other side) should be about 45 degrees.
Evidently, this is so that you can easily remove the pins should your rig go down and you need to clear everything.
I hadn't really thought about it in this detail. I wonder I am one of the few who didn't know this.
- henry