ngleadow
Well-known member
- Joined
- Dec 8, 2010
- Messages
- 82
- Fluid Motion Model
- C-24 C
- Vessel Name
- Blue Socks (sold)
Hi all;
Stern tying the boat during summer cruising is a fact of life in Desolation Sound, some Gulf Island anchorages, and other locations. My previous method of storing my stern tie line was to bundle it up and keep it in the locker on the stern of Blue Socks, our R25 . But I have been on the lookout for the perfect stern tie reel. Unfortunately, there was always something about the different models, and homemade devices that didn’t quite meet my expectations; so I designed my own. My album has pictures that will make the following explanation more comprehensible.
I got a free rope spool from our local marina, cut two plywood circles to fit it as the cheeks, added a handle, treated all the wood with Sikkens SRD and assembled the reel. I had a local metal working shop weld pieces of stainless steel tubing (1 inch o.d.) in a kind of open “h” shape with a horizontal piece at the top that acted as the axis for the spool. The legs of the “h” fitted into stainless “T” brackets attached to the stern rail. Voila.. a stern tie. The reel holds about 350 ft. of ¼ inch floating line. See my album for pictures.
You can have a close-up look if you're attending the Desolation Islands cruise starting in Ganges. If it meets your needs, then go ahead and copy it; getting a patent is much too expensive.
Happy stern tying.
Norm on Blue Socks
Stern tying the boat during summer cruising is a fact of life in Desolation Sound, some Gulf Island anchorages, and other locations. My previous method of storing my stern tie line was to bundle it up and keep it in the locker on the stern of Blue Socks, our R25 . But I have been on the lookout for the perfect stern tie reel. Unfortunately, there was always something about the different models, and homemade devices that didn’t quite meet my expectations; so I designed my own. My album has pictures that will make the following explanation more comprehensible.
I got a free rope spool from our local marina, cut two plywood circles to fit it as the cheeks, added a handle, treated all the wood with Sikkens SRD and assembled the reel. I had a local metal working shop weld pieces of stainless steel tubing (1 inch o.d.) in a kind of open “h” shape with a horizontal piece at the top that acted as the axis for the spool. The legs of the “h” fitted into stainless “T” brackets attached to the stern rail. Voila.. a stern tie. The reel holds about 350 ft. of ¼ inch floating line. See my album for pictures.
You can have a close-up look if you're attending the Desolation Islands cruise starting in Ganges. If it meets your needs, then go ahead and copy it; getting a patent is much too expensive.
Happy stern tying.
Norm on Blue Socks