That was the idea rslifkin, to get you started. HaHa
Yup I think the black wheels look awful too.
One thing black that’s not a bad idea is the interior of cars. Light upholstery gets dirty looking much faster. But lighter colors look better if one can keep them clean. White upholstery looks terrible.
This is opinion .... 95%? .... must be some truth in it somewhere.
Truth .... people wear jeans because their appearance degrades minimally as they stain and get dirty w age. And that’s the truth
If you boat on the rivers with lots of grundgy lock walls, black fenders come in very handy. White ones will get ugly very fast. And while fender covers look nice on the boat, when going 'up' in a big lock your boat will get pushed into the wall with great force, and those covers get messed up/shredded pretty easily. But I do prefer white dock lines
SeeVee wrote;
“Up in your neck of the woods, black interiors may work. Here in Florida, they are brutally hot. Love my white (or at least off white) and does stay clean.”
Yes and I like the look of natural leather best but otherwise don’t like leather in cars.
I’m not Norman. I’m Eric. Says so on every post. Wish all others would post their first name. Or make up a name if you’re afraid of being hacked. Many “handles” or avatar names are hard to transfer to a new post. Hard to spell and what’s upper case or not needs repeat look backs to get it right. PITA
FC,
The issue with black fenders for lock walls, is you don't see the grunge on the fenders and it gets on your boat. Grunge on white shows up easily and is cleaned.
However, for locking, the fender board eliminates all of the grunge on the boat.
Color me white for everything.
Something I noticed on a neighbour's boat the other day, his spring lines were long enough to get in his wheel. Something to contemplate...
On the spring lines long enough to hit the props thing, in my mind, it's unavoidable on a lot of boats.
rslifkin wrote;
“In case color matters, my lines are all black.”
Why black? Is this vanity or engineering? Or is black best because the bird s*it dosn’t hide.
I can't take my boat anywhere public with its motley collection of black/white and twisted/braided dock lines. I am sooo embarrassed. NOT
I can't take my boat anywhere public with its motley collection of black/white and twisted/braided dock lines. I am sooo embarrassed. NOT
My aft line ended up in mine. Spurs can not cut through 5/8 braided.
I prefer long lines. Much easier for throwing if someone is there to assist.
Typically my wife will get aft spring on, and I will make a dash for bow line. We're in a double slip and once docked in 25+. By the time I got off the boat a gust just grabbed the bow and it was off to the races. We ended up almost sideways in the slip. Very glad we had long lines.
As a general rule, black will last longer because it does not let the UV in. That is why, for example, that black wire ties are used when they will be exposed to sunlight.
And you pick on my asymmetrical fenders...
Toss a messenger line and have them pull the spring line after it... That way, a messenger will get cut by the spurs if necessary, and you can more easily and accurately toss a messenger line with a monkey fist on the end.
We typically use 5/8" and that's not usually been too challenging for tossing to dockhands. But we have often used 50 or 35' lines for that. I've gone back and swapped them for suitable length lines later, if just to avoid having a lot of extra line cluttering the deck. Where we typically travel using 3/4" or larger becomes a problem on the cleats. I do keep a pair of 35' 3/4" lines aboard but have had little need to use them. I typically only bother if we're expecting excessively windy conditions and I want to have a little extra security.A variation: Does anyone use a few lightweight lines (easier to throw, easier for a dockhand to quickly manage) when docking, to be replaced with the 'real' lines once you're settled?
We're learning that tossing our normal lines (3/4"? 7/8"?) isn't that easy.
Double braid 5/8" bow and stern with rubber snubbers. Spring line, same size, without snubber, CHB 34. The snubbers provide the necessary "give" and otherwise, keep the boat snug to the dock. Spring lines allow for limited front to back movement.
Color is black. History says white plastics are more susceptible to UV degradation. I don't know if that is true with nylon but....black never looks dirty.
rslifkin wrote;
“In case color matters, my lines are all black.”
Why black? Is this vanity or engineering? Or is black best because the bird s*it dosn’t hide.