John Stone wrote:I’d want to know if that is normal wear or is there some adjustment on how your pendant is attached that might eliminate that wear. There are a lot of experienced harbor masters in your area (Maine?).
I believe it was rubbing on the shackle that attaches it to the swivel. I set everything up according to Wayne Hamilton's methods. The one thing I may have gotten wrong, though, is he talks about using zip ties to keep the pendant in a position where it can't rub on the shackle. I don't think I got that part right. The shackle is 5/8, which is exactly what Hamilton recommends for my size boat.
Carl Thunberg wrote:You should be able to get at least five years out of a Yale pendant.
An old timer who I hired on the original mooring install said 10 years, but I took that with a grain of salt. My mooring guys in Camden are very experienced, and they seem to replace after about 3 years. Also, interestingly, they told me not to use a swivel unless absolutely necessary, as that's the weak point in the system and I guess they've seen some failures. They were a little dismissive of Hamilton when I mentioned that I was following his methods. I decided to keep the swivel, although I'm putting a new one on this year (after 5 years on the original). They didn't use a swivel on my Camden mooring, and I've seen the pendant get wrapped around the chain on more than one occasion (in fact I got a call from them yesterday saying I needed a new pendant because of that very problem, which chafed the old one that was only 2 years old!).
Carl Thunberg wrote:Something in your mooring system isn't quite right. You should not be getting chafe in that area. Your thimble is either rubbing against the chain or an undersized shackle. I have the exact same pendant and have never experienced chafe in that area. You should be able to get at least five years out of a Yale pendant. 16 feet seems a little long for a Typhoon. Also, you want a float right after the thimble, so the mooring pendant lays sideways against the ball, not hanging down. Maine Sail has a very good tutorial on mooring setup. Check it out.
Carl Thunberg wrote:16 feet seems a little long for a Typhoon.
I've read that you don't want it too short, but never heard that a pendant can be "too long."
Carl Thunberg wrote:Also, you want a float right after the thimble, so the mooring pendant lays sideways against the ball, not hanging down. Maine Sail has a very good tutorial on mooring setup. Check it out.
I do have that on my remote mooring and told the Camden guys to make sure that was set up this year on the Camden mooring. I've read MaineSail's stuff and find it very informative.