boty said...
kites run nowhere near the loads that headsails or mains run on their halyards code zeros and assos generate much higher loads due to bringing the apparent so far forward and needing to be cut with less round necessitating much higher halyard tensions which is why if your running a zero you need dynema on a 2 to 1 halyard so as to halve the compression loads as that is what causes masts to fail . Kites when running or reaching don't generate any where near the load of the headsails remember the apparent wind is with you there by halving the force of the wind on the sail this is why you can carry so much more sail area off the breeze our zero which is 2/3 the area of our standard kite cant be carried in over 12 well forward where as our standard kite can carry through to 35 running
We're talking about halyards here.
You're saying in one statement that kite halyards carry nowhere near the load a jib halyard carries, and then in the next statement you're talking about how much more load your assymetric kite carries?
We're more than likely talking about a cruiser here, not a TP52 or Wild Oats.
You seem a little confused about apparent wind. The more apparent wind generated, the less the load on the kite (and everything else for that matter). Chances are the yacht in question generates very little apparent wind, which means more load, on everything.
If you want to talk specifically about halyard loads, the foresail halyard and main halyard are carrying not much more load as is placed on them by the Cunningham/downhaul and vang. The weight the wind generates on the sail is being shared for the much larger part by the forestay, sheets and in the case of the main, the mast. The kite halyard, at it's attachment point to the kite on the other hand, must cope with a much larger percentage of the load placed on the sail by the wind. Don't underestimate how much load the wind places on everything it's far more than you would think, especially on what is generally the largest sail on the boat, the kite.
OP, sorry for the carry on. Most braided (and rated) ropes are fairly capable of carrying the high loads these days. All I'm saying is take the SWL and breaking strains into account as well before your purchase. Rope in the length and diameter you'll require isn't cheap. You want to make sure it's up to the task before you buy it.